TY - JOUR
T1 - Slingsby Bethel's Analysis of State Interests
AU - Walter, Ryan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Taylor & Francis.
PY - 2015/5/19
Y1 - 2015/5/19
N2 - Seventeenth-century thinking on the relationship between trade and state power was routinely conducted using the concept of state interests, which enabled users to conceive a Europe of competing states that managed the balance of power through trade and war. Poor interest management could arise from ignorance, error, or the divergence between the private interests of rulers and a state's true interests. The stakes of pursuing or neglecting true interest were high: the survival and prosperity of the state. The dominance of ‘mercantilism’ as a historiographical category has obscured the role of interest in early modern thought. This paper examines the work of one of England's most prolific interest writers, Slingsby Bethel, to demonstrate the importance of reading interest writings without recourse to mercantilism. The two focuses are, first, how the rhetoric of counsel was used to defend an ordinary subject's presumption to comment on state affairs and, second, the capacity for interest writers to construe the rise and fall of state power in terms of good laws and statesmanship.
AB - Seventeenth-century thinking on the relationship between trade and state power was routinely conducted using the concept of state interests, which enabled users to conceive a Europe of competing states that managed the balance of power through trade and war. Poor interest management could arise from ignorance, error, or the divergence between the private interests of rulers and a state's true interests. The stakes of pursuing or neglecting true interest were high: the survival and prosperity of the state. The dominance of ‘mercantilism’ as a historiographical category has obscured the role of interest in early modern thought. This paper examines the work of one of England's most prolific interest writers, Slingsby Bethel, to demonstrate the importance of reading interest writings without recourse to mercantilism. The two focuses are, first, how the rhetoric of counsel was used to defend an ordinary subject's presumption to comment on state affairs and, second, the capacity for interest writers to construe the rise and fall of state power in terms of good laws and statesmanship.
KW - Adam Smith
KW - Balance of power
KW - Europe
KW - Slingsby Bethel
KW - interest
KW - mercantilism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84929702661&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/01916599.2014.926659
DO - 10.1080/01916599.2014.926659
M3 - Article
SN - 0191-6599
VL - 41
SP - 489
EP - 506
JO - History of European Ideas
JF - History of European Ideas
IS - 4
ER -