Adam Smith photograph

Adam Smith

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Gender Male
Death7379 years ago
Date of birth January 1,5597
Zodiac sign Gemini
Born Kirkcaldy
United Kingdom
Date of died July 17,1790
DiedAdam Smith's Panmure House
Edinburgh
United Kingdom
Notable ideasClassical economics
division of labour
Job Economist
Philosopher
Author
Professor
Movies/Shows The Chemical Brothers: Don't Think
Trespass Against Us
Official site house.gov
NationalityAmerican
Current office2022-02-24 06:49:48
Spouse Sara Smith
Children Kendall Charlotte Smith
David Anne
Cecilia Margaret
Education University of Washington
Kirkcaldy High School
Influencees David Ricardo
John Maynard Keynes
Parents Margaret Douglas
Adam Smith
Influenced Karl Marx
David Ricardo
John Maynard Keynes
Awards Fellow of the Royal Society
Fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
Influence Jean-Jacques Rousseau
François Quesnay
Francis Hutcheson
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
Jean-Baptiste Say
Downwards The Wealth of Nations
Notable idea Invisible hand
Division of labour
Classical economics
Nominations British Independent Film Award – The Douglas Hickox Award
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID404083

Wealth of Nations
Lectures on Jurisprudence
Essays on Philosophical Subjects
The correspondence of Adam Smith
The Essential Adam Smith
Lectures on rhetoric and belles lettres
A catalogue of the library of Adam Smith
The Wealth of Nations: The Economics Classic - A Selected Edition for the Contemporary Reader
The wisdom of Adam Smith
A complete analysis, or abridgment, of Dr. Adam Smith's Inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations
Essays, philosophical and literary
The Wealth of Nations Book 1
The Moral Philosophy
The Philosophers
Essay on colonies
History of Economic Theory: The Selected Writings of Adam Smith, Jean-Baptiste Say, and J. R. McCulloch
Additions and corrections to the first and second edition of Dr. Adam Smith's Inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations
Wealth of Nations IV-V
The Rough Guide to 21st Century Cinema: The Essential Companion to 101 Modern Movies
Money Thicker Than Blood
Property and Virtue in Moral Philosophy
The Theory of Moral Sentiments, Or, An Essay Towards an Analysis of the Principles by which Men Naturally Judge Concerning the Conduct and Character, First of Their Neighbours, and Afterwards of Themselves: To which is Added, a Dissertation on the Origin of Languages
Delphi Complete Works of Adam Smith (Illustrated)
The Theory of Moral Sentiments by Adam Smith and the Law by Frederick Bastiat
Adam Smith
Economic Philosophy: Full Text Database: SGML Format
Blue Mountain Basic Black Lined Journal
A Historical Album of Kentucky
The Wealth of Nations
The Theory of Moral Sentiments
The Invisible Hand
Adam Smith's moral and political philosophy
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Adam Smith Life story


Adam Smith FRSA was a Scottish economist and philosopher who was a pioneer in the thinking of political economy and key figure during the Scottish Enlightenment.

Biography

Adam smith (1723-1790) was a scottish economist and philosopher.He was born on june 5.1723 in kirkcaldy.Scotland.He was the son of margaret douglas and adam smith.A lawyer and civil servant.He had one older brotehr.David smith.

Physical Characteristics

Adam smith was a tall man.Standing at 6 feet 2 inches.He had a slim build and was known to be a very handsmoe man.Ihs eyes were a deep blue and his hair was a light brown.

Education and Career

Adam smith attended the university of glasgow at the age of 14 and later attended balliol college.Oxford.He studied moral philosophy and graduated in 1740.After graduating.He became a professor of logic at glasgow university and later a professor of moral philosophy.In 1776.He published his most famous work.The wealth of nations.Which is considreed to be the foundation of modern economisc.

Relationships

Adam smith never married and had no children.He was close to his mothre and brother.And had a close relationship with his friend and mentor.Daivd hume.

Zodiac Sign

Adam smith was a gemini.

Most Important Event

The omst important event in adma smith s life was the publication of his book the wealth of nations in 1776.This book is considered to be the foundation of modern economics and has had a lasting impact on the world.

Life Story

Adam smith was born in scotland in 1723.He attended the university of glsagow and later balliol college.Oxford.After graduating.He became a professor of logic and moral philosophy at glasgow university.In 1776.He published his omst famous work.The wealth of nations.Which is considered to be the foundation of modern economics.He nevre married and had no children.But was close to his mother and brother.And had a close relationship with his friend and mentor.David hume.He died in 1790 at the age of 67.

Big firm bosses' pay rose 16% as workers squeezed

Big firm bosses' pay rose 16% as workers squeezed
Aug 21,2023 7:11 pm

... But economic think tank the Adam Smith Institute said " knee-jerk attacks" on chief executive pay were unhelpful, and said more attention needed to be applied to the benefits for the wider economy...

Rishi Sunak heckled by angry publican over alcohol tax

Rishi Sunak heckled by angry publican over alcohol tax
Aug 1,2023 1:10 pm

...By Adam Smith and Kate WhannelBBC NewsRishi Sunak has been heckled during a visit to the Great British Beer Festival in central London...

Cluster bombs: Biden defends decision to send Ukraine controversial weapons

Cluster bombs: Biden defends decision to send Ukraine controversial weapons
Jul 7,2023 9:20 pm

... But Adam Smith, a Washington Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, told the BBC the White House had made the " right call"...

House prices drop for third month in a row, says Halifax

House prices drop for third month in a row, says Halifax
Jul 7,2023 3:30 am

... Adam Smith, founder of Alfa Mortgages predicted the strain being put on people s finances would " almost certainly send prices lower" during the months ahead...

King Charles: New coins featuring monarch's portrait unveiled

King Charles: New coins featuring monarch's portrait unveiled
Oct 2,2022 12:00 am

... Shops are permitted to no longer accept £20 Adam Smith and £50 notes featuring the portraits of Matthew Boulton and James Watt from Saturday...

Just 100 days left to spend paper £20 and £50 notes

Just 100 days left to spend paper £20 and £50 notes
Jun 23,2022 4:10 am

... Celebrating Alan TuringThe Bank of England s paper £20 featuring economist Adam Smith has been in circulation since 2007, but has been gradually replaced by the plastic version which includes the work and portrait of artist JMW Turner...

Pay gap from bosses to staff to widen - think tank

Pay gap from bosses to staff to widen - think tank
May 23,2022 2:20 am

... Politics of envy However, Emily Fielder, head of communications at the Adam Smith Institute, said while " fretting about CEO pay might make for a good headline, getting involved would do little to increase workers wages and benefits to shareholders"...

Online Safety Bill: New offences and tighter rules

Online Safety Bill: New offences and tighter rules
Dec 14,2021 2:45 pm

... But think tank the Adam Smith Institute (ASI) said the report " fails to alleviate the gigantic threats posed by the draft Online Safety Bill to freedom of speech, privacy and innovation"...

Can a computer fool you into thinking it is human?

Apr 18,2020 11:36 pm

Robert Epstein was looking for love. The year being 2006, he was looking online.

, he began a promising email exchange with a pretty brunette in Russia.

Epstein was disappointed - he wanted More Than a penfriend, let's be Frank - But she was warm and friendly. Soon she confessed she was developing a crush on him.

"I have very special feelings About You . In the same way as The Beautiful flower blossoming in mine Soul . . I only cannot explain. . I shall wait your answer, holding my fingers have Crossed . . "

The Correspondence blossomed, But it took a long while for him to notice That Ivana never really responded directly to his questions.

Robert Epstein was one of the founders of the Loebner Prize

She would write about taking a walk in The Park , having conversations with her mother, and repeat Sweet Nothings about how much she liked him.

Suspicious, he eventually sent Ivana a line of pure bang-on-the-keyboard gibberish. She responded with another email about her mother.

At Last , Epstein realised The Truth : Ivana was a chatbot.

What makes the story surprising is not That a Russian chatbot managed to trick a lonely middle-aged Californian man.

It is That The Man who was tricked was one of the founders of the into thinking That they, too, are human.

In other words, one of The World 's top chatbot experts had spent two months trying to seduce a computer program.

highlights the inventions, ideas and innovations That helped create the economic world.

It is broadcast on the BBC World Service. You can find and or

Each year, the Loebner Prize challenges chatbots to pass the Turing Test , proposed in 1950 by.

In Turing's "imitation game", a judge would communicate through a teleprompter with a human and a computer. The computer's job was to imitate human conversation convincingly enough to persuade The Judge .

Alan Turing was one of The First people to consider whether machines can "think"

Turing thought That within 50 Years , computers would be able to fool 30% of human judges after Five Minutes of conversation.

He was not far off. It actually took 64 years, although experts continue to argue about whether - really counts.

Like Ivana, Goostman managed expectations by claiming not to be a native English speaker. He said he was a 13-year-old kid from Odessa in Ukraine.

One of The First and most famous early chatbots, Eliza, would not have passed the Turing Test - But did, with just a few lines of code, successfully imitate a human non-directional therapist.

Named after Eliza Doolittle , the unworldly heroine of George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion, she - it? - was programmed in the mid-1960s by Joseph Weizenbaum .

Joseph Weizenbaum is widely considered to be one of the fathers of modern Artificial Intelligence

If you typed, "my husband made me come here", Eliza might simply reply, "your husband made you come here". If you mentioned feeling angry, Eliza might ask, "do you think coming here will help you not to feel angry?". Or she might simply say, "please go on".

People did not care That Eliza was Not Human : they seemed pleased That someone would listen to them without judgement or trying to sleep with them.

Weizenbaum's secretary famously asked him to leave The Room so That she could talk to Eliza in private.

More things That made the modern economy:

Psychotherapists were fascinated.

A contemporary article in The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease mused That "several hundred patients an hour could be handled by a computer system". Supervising an army of bots, the human therapist would be far more efficient.

And indeed, cognitive behavioural therapy is now administered by chatbots, such as Woebot, designed by a clinical psychologist, Alison Darcy. There is no pretence That they are human.

Weizenbaum himself was horrified by the idea That people would settle for so poor a substitute for human interaction. But like Mary Shelley 's Dr Frankenstein, he had created something beyond his control.

Chatbots are now ubiquitous, handling a growing number of complaints and enquiries.

and decides whether they should be referred to a Doctor .

The Artificial Intelligence software provides what it determines to be The Most likely diagnoses

Amelia talks directly to the customers of some banks, But is used by US company Allstate Insurance to provide information to the Call Centre workers which they use while talking to customers.

And voice-controlled programmes like Amazon's Alexa, Apple's Siri and Google's Assistant interpret our requests and speak back, with the simple goal of sparing us from stabbing clumsily at tiny screens.

Brian Christian , author of The Most Human Human, a book about the Turing Test , points out That most modern chatbots do not even try to pass it.

There are exceptions: Ivana-esque chatbots were used by to hide the fact That very few human women used The Site .

Ashley Madison 's use of chatbots emerged when its systems were hacked in 2015

It seems we are less likely to notice a chatbot is Not Human when it plugs directly into our libido.

Another tactic is to wind us up. The MGonz chatbot tricks people by starting An Exchange of insults. Politics - perhaps most notoriously the 2016 US election Campaign - is Well -seasoned with Social Media chatbots pretending to be outraged citizens, tweeting lies and insulting memes.

But generally chatbots are happy to present as chatbots. Seeming human is hard.

Commercial bots have largely ignored That challenge, and instead specialise in doing small tasks Well - solving straightforward problems, and passing on The Complex cases to a real person.

The Economist Adam Smith explained in the late 1700s That productivity is built on a process of dividing up labour into small specialised tasks. Modern chatbots work on the same principle.

This logic leads economists today to argue That Jobs are sliced into tasks. Computers take over the routine tasks and humans supply the creativity and adaptability.

Visicalc , The First computer spreadsheet program, revolutionised the accountancy profession

That is what we observe, for example, The Cash machine or the self-checkout kiosk. Chatbots give us another example.

But we must be wary of The Risk That as consumers or producers - and perhaps even as ordinary citizens - we contort ourselves to fit The Computers .

We use the self-checkout, even though a chat with a shop assistant might lift our mood.

We post status updates - or just click an Emoji - That are filtered by Social Media algorithms; as with Eliza, we are settling for The Feeling That someone is listening.

Christian argues That we humans should view this as a challenge to raise Our Game . Let The Computers take over The Call centres. Is That not better than forcing a robot made of flesh-and-blood to stick to a script, frustrating everyone involved?

We might hope That rather than trying or failing to fool humans, better chatbots will save time for everyone - freeing us up to talk more meaningfully to each other for real.

The author writes the Financial Times's Undercover Economist column. is broadcast on the BBC World Service. You can find and or



robotics, artificial intelligence

Source of news: bbc.com

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