Constantine Christos Vassiliou is Civitas Research Fellow at the University of Texas at Austin. He is a political theorist and historian of ideas specialising in Enlightenment political thought. He is the co-editor and wrote the introductory chapter for Liberal Education and Citizenship in a Free Society (MU Press), a book that examines the relationship between liberal education and socially responsible citizenship in the United States. He is also a chapter contributor and co-editor (w/ Jeffrey Church and Alin Fumurescu) of The Spirit of Montesquieu’s Persian Letters (Lexington Press).
Constantine Vassiliou’s ambitious book offers its readers a timely opportunity to reexamine Montesquieu’s complex ideas on finance, commerce, honor, and liberty in the context of his engagement with the ideas of the Scottish Enlightenment. It starts from the impact of the events related to John Law’s system on Montesquieu’s intellectual formation and puts his ideas in dialogue with Adam Smith, David Hume, and Adam Ferguson. Vassiliou admirably succeeds in shedding fresh light on the complexity of Montesquieu’s liberalism and invites us to rethink the importance of political moderation for addressing our contemporary economic and political challenges. * Aurelian Craiutu, Indiana University, Bloomington * Moderate Liberalism and the Scottish Enlightenment is an effectively ambitious book. On the one hand, it weaves together, in intriguing ways, thoughts gathered from Montesquieu and the central figures of the Scottish Enlightenment; on the other hand, it slyly juxtaposes those thoughts with recent concerns about the practical and theoretical status of liberalism and its critics. This is a needed study for the times in which we live. -- Stuart D. Warner, Roosevelt University Original, engaging, and very insightful. Moderate Liberalism and the Scottish Enlightenment offers a rare combination of historical context and philosophical probity necessary for a serious study of political philosophy. -- Khalil Habib, Hillsdale College This thoughtful and readable book offers a sequence of comparative analyses of the political thought of Montesquieu and his major Scottish interlocutors: David Hume, Adam Smith, and Adam Ferguson [...] Each chapter rests on a thorough command of the relevant primary material and offers conceptually illuminating scholarship. -- Iain McDaniel, University of Sussex * Eighteenth-Century Scotland * The question this book poses is whether a balanced and moderate liberalism is still possible today at a time when it is challenged by deep sources of discontent from both the left and the right. Do market democracies possess the resources necessary to provide for the kind of civic personality that can resist today’s oligarchic elites? Vassiliou has done an excellent job of centering these debates -- Steven B. Smith * The Review of Politics *