One of The Australian Review's 2017 Books of the Year
One of The Guardian's Best Books of 2017
Selected for Bloomberg View's Must-Reads of 2017: From Space to Chinese Noir
One of Project Syndicate's Best Reads in 2017 (chosen by Kaushik Basu)
Shortlisted for the 2018 Ralph Waldo Emerson Award, Phi Beta Kappa Society
A wonderfully written book about a beautiful friendship.---Tyler Cowen, Bloomberg View
Dennis Rasmussen . . . tells the story of Smith and Hume's bond, arguing convincingly and engagingly that there is 'no higher example of a philosophical friendship in the entire Western tradition.'---Ruth Scurr, Wall Street Journal
Rasmussen tells an engaging and sometimes moving story of how the friendship between Smith and David Hume shaped, and was shaped by, their attempt to comprehend the rapid development of the social and political order under which we still live.---Alexander Douglas, Times Literary Supplement
Lively and accessible--of broad interest to readers in philosophy, economics, political science, and other disciplines. * Kirkus *
Masterly. . . . Easy to digest and smart. Recommended.---Mark Spencer, Library Journal
In The Infidel and the Professor: David Hume, Adam Smith, and the Friendship that Shaped Modern Thought, Dennis Rasmussen . . . tells the story of their friendship well. Fourteen nicely-judged chapters take the reader through the overlapping lives of the two men, including such incidents as Hume's notorious falling-out with Rousseau, through to the natural climax of their friendship at Hume's death, and Smith's own demise 14 years later. . . . A short and lively book that sustains the interest not merely of the general reader but the specialist to the end. That is a considerable achievement.---Jesse Norman, Prospect
[Rasmussen] deftly examines not only Hume and Smith's personal relationship, but also the indispensable part that they played in shaping the Scottish Enlightenment. The result is a valuable study of the rise of the liberal tradition.---Jacob Heilbrunn, National Interest
The Infidel and the Professor is a lean, easy to digest read that is rich in interesting detail. It is anchored in weighty scholarship but not burdened by excessive demonstrations of it. . . . [Rasmussen] makes the distinctive qualities of each more evident. Pick up his book and you might find yourself agreeing with Hume that 'reading and sauntering and lownging and dozing, which I call thinking, is my supreme Happiness'.---Julian Baggini, Literary Review
What his book does offer . . . is a clearer, more exhaustive picture of the common ground that existed between the two thinkers, a map of the intersections, echoes and mirroring perspectives that connect their works. The Infidel and the Professor is written in a style that makes it accessible to non-specialists, who can discover through it the story of two exceptional and very engaging personalities. But it is also of interest for those who are already familiar with Hume's and Smith's lives and works, as it allows us to see them as part of a collective intellectual project. Above all, it reminds us of what the social sciences were originally meant to be: a broad critical reflection on the condition of human beings exposed to the bewildering transformations that modernity brought to their lives.---Biancamaria Fontana, Times Higher Education
As a total Hume fan, I enjoyed reading it, and it's a well-written book. You don't need to be an expert on either [Hume or Smith] to enjoy it, and get some flavour of the milieu of the Scottish Enlightenment.---Diane Coyle, Enlightened Economist
In addition to painting a vivid portrait of the intellectual life of 18th-century Scotland, Professor Rasmussen provides a road map of the development of Smith's ideas based on his personal history and the broader political, social, theological and academic environments. [His] greatest contribution, however, is to shed new light on the surprising depth and nature of the intellectual and personal influence of the radical skeptic philosopher David Hume on Smith. Touching and illuminating.---Jonathan A. Knee, New York Times
The best authoritative scholarly book on David Hume and Adam Smith published in the last 5 years. It is destined to be the classic book of those times.---Gavin Kennedy, Adam Smith's Lost Legacy
The Infidel and the Professor shone a deserved spotlight on David Hume and Adam Smith.---Julian Baggini, The Guardian
This is a well-written and well-researched history. It rewards a careful reading. . . . I recommend this book highly.---John Mullen, Metapsychology
The Infidel and the Professor, [Rasmussen's] account of a 'friendship that changed modern thought', is a charming work. Our politicians would benefit from reading it and so, frankly, would you.---Alex Massie, The Times
Rasmussen has written an excellent book which offers a clear account of the ideas of Smith and Hume, and celebrates the importance of philosophical friendship.---Robin Downie, Philosophy
Wonderful. . . . [This] book should prove to be an indispensable starting point for future inquiries into Hume and Smith's personal and philosophical relationship.---Erik W. Matson, Review of Austrian Economics
Rasmussen's story about this strong and stable friendship will be engaging for those who are unfamiliar with Hume's entertaining letters or Smith's personal quirks, and it is a valuable contribution for scholars working on the philosophical views of each.---Lauren Kopajtic, Journal of the History of Philosophy
A sympathetic account of the closeness of two of the world's greatest thinkers and the warmth of the affection that he evokes is a fine testament to their friendship and his writing.---Craig Smith, Perspectives on Politics
Rasmussen is at his interpretive best here, and his reading of how these events affected the friendship between Hume and Smith is both novel and persuasive.---John Rick, Reading Religion
[N]ot a few times did I mark in the margins a thread of inquiry I should like to pull on in the future, using The Infidel and the Professoras a starting point. I do not doubt but it will be likewise stimulating for you.---Edward Austin Middleton, EH.net
This original, elegantly written, compelling essay, which combines textual analysis with a contextual approach, is likely to have a momentous impact on the historiography of the Scottish Enlightenment and of the Age of Enlightenment as a whole.---Diego Lucci, Journal of Ecclesiastical History
Compelling . . . gripping.---James R. Otteson, History of Political Economy
Rasmussen's beautifully written book is the kind of work that any serious David Hume and Adam Smith scholars might have once or twice dreamed of writing.---Tatsuya Sakamoto, Journal of the History of Economic Thought
An excellent introduction for those coming to Hume and Smith for the first time.---Ralph McLean, Journal of the Edinburgh Bibliograpical Society
Rasmussen succeeds not only in uncovering the uniquely intimate friendship between Hume and Smith among the group of like-minded literati who produced the Scottish Enlightenment, but a kind of inter-generational 'passing of the baton' from Hume (eleven years older) to his younger colleague.---Patrick Madigan, Heythrop Journal
Admirable. . . . Rasmussen's book is to be highly recommended for the legion of readers of Hume . . . and Smith.---Peter Loptson, European Legacy