16/12/2024
The debate about when ‘liberal’ first acquired a political meaning has been resolved. The answer is the 1770s, when the adjective ‘liberal’ became the name of the policy orientation against government restriction, government monopoly and protectionism, and in favor of individual liberty, premised by a stable, functional system of governmental authority.
This policy orientation was christened ‘liberal’ by Scotsmen Adam Smith, William Robertson and others. In 1776, Smith’s ‘The Wealth of Nations’ advanced the liberty principle as a policy maxim. That book built a case for a presumption of liberty. It was enormously influential.
In the decades that followed, the adjective ‘liberal’ was exported from Britain to the continent and gave rise to the nouns ‘liberal’ and ‘liberalism’. All of this has been established thanks to new analysis made possible by the digitisation of historic texts.
The first political liberalism, then, proclaimed the policy orientation of Adam Smith. But, 100 years later, ‘liberal’ began to acquire a meaning contrary to the original political meaning. That inversion began first in Britain and, in the early twentieth century, began to grow in North America, where the inverted meaning became pronounced.
These confusions about the true meaning of ‘liberal’ will not subside any time soon.
But consider a question that brings us back to the 1770s: how did liberalism’s Scottish vanguard decide on the name of their policy orientation?
For centuries, the adjective ‘liberal’ denoted aspects of liberality. To be liberal was to be generous, munificent, indulgent, as in ‘with a liberal hand,’ or open-minded, tolerant, free from bias or bigotry, and generally befitting a free man, as in ‘liberal arts’ and ‘liberal sciences’. These meanings were not political, and ‘liberal’ was not used to label a kind of politics.
Building on this traditional understanding, Smith and others started, when discussing policy and politics, to write of ‘liberal principles,’ ‘the liberal system,’ ‘the liberal plan,’ ‘liberal policy,’ ‘liberal government’ and ‘liberal ideas’.
‘Liberal’ was fitting, firstly, because ‘liberal’ and ‘liberty’ look alike. They share the morpheme ‘liber’. That likeness held potentiality for infusing ‘liberal’ with a strong link to liberty.
✍️Daniel B. Klein and Erik W. Matson
Fresh analysis of historical texts has revealed the origin of economic liberalism