Anders Chydenius Quotes

Anders Chydenius was a Finnish priest and a member of the Swedish Riksdag, and is known as the leading classical liberal of Nordic history.

Born in Sotkamo, Finland and having studied under Pehr Kalm at the Royal Academy of Åbo, Chydenius became a priest and Enlightenment philosopher. He was elected as an ecclesiastic member of the Swedish Riksdag of the Estates in 1765–66, in which his Cap party seized the majority and government and championed Sweden's first Freedom of the Press Act, the most liberal in the world along with those of Great Britain and the Seven United Provinces. Vehemently opposed to the extreme interventionist policies of mercantilism preached by the previously predominant Hat party since decades, he was ultimately coerced into retirement for his criticism of the Cap administration's radical deregulation policies and their social and political consequences.

Following Gustav III's coup d'état in 1772, which meant the end of parliamentary rule for another century, Chydenius briefly returned to prominence and worked to increase civil liberties and economic freedom as part of Gustav's doctrine of enlightened despotism, and contributed the abolishment of torture as means of interrogation, the limitation of capital punishment, and the legalisation of Jewish and Catholic immigration into Sweden. Ultimately, the king's increasingly autocratic position brought Chydenius out of favour again, and he retired to private life in Ostrobothnia, where he died at age 73.

An early pioneer—also by international standards—and proponent of economic liberalism, freedom of religion, freedom of speech and migration he was one of the first comprehensive philosophers of liberalism. Wikipedia  

✵ 26. February 1729 – 1. February 1803
Anders Chydenius photo

Works

The National Gain
Anders Chydenius
Anders Chydenius: 5   quotes 0   likes

Famous Anders Chydenius Quotes

“…that every individual spontaneously tries to find the place and the trade in which he can best increase National gain, if laws do not prevent him from doing so.”

The National Gain, §5, 1765. Here Chydenius could be said to describe the invisible hand eleven years before Adam Smith wrote The Wealth of Nations.

“…Fatherland without freedom and merit is a large word with little meaning.”

For What Reason do so Many Swedes Emigrate Every Year?, 1765.

“The exercise of one coercion always makes another inevitable.”

Thoughts on the Natural Rights of Servants and Peasants, 1778.

Similar authors

Joseph Addison photo
Joseph Addison 226
politician, writer and playwright
Maximilien Robespierre photo
Maximilien Robespierre 78
French revolutionary lawyer and politician
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe photo
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 185
German writer, artist, and politician
Niccolo Machiavelli photo
Niccolo Machiavelli 130
Italian politician, Writer and Author
Benjamin Franklin photo
Benjamin Franklin 183
American author, printer, political theorist, politician, p…
Richard Brinsley Sheridan photo
Richard Brinsley Sheridan 58
Irish-British politician, playwright and writer
Thomas More photo
Thomas More 26
English Renaissance humanist
Marquis de Sade photo
Marquis de Sade 30
French novelist and philosopher
Carl Linnaeus photo
Carl Linnaeus 23
Swedish botanist, physician, and zoologist
Emanuel Swedenborg photo
Emanuel Swedenborg 13
Swedish 18th century scientist and theologian