Abstract

The year 2009 marks the 250th anniversary of three key Scottish Enlightenment works: David Hume’s Tudor volumes of his History of England, William Robertson’s bestselling History of Scotland, and Adam Smith’s highly influential Theory of Moral Sentiments. Fittingly, several new scholarly books, each making the case for the Scottish Enlightenment as both unique and relevant, have recently appeared (or reappeared, in the case of Broadie’s book, which was originally published in 2001) to claim readers’ attentions.

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