“…Smith's views on equality have attracted considerable attention of late (see Fleischacker, 2013), with scholars seeking to recover his “radical egalitarianism” (McLean, 2006, p. 128), or commending his work as “a milestone in the history of egalitarianism.” (Anderson, 2016, p. 169) In particular, it has recently been argued that his analysis of inequality can enrich contemporary debates by showing how economic inequalities distort our sympathies and thereby undermine happiness and morality (Rasmussen, 2016). Viewed from this perspective, the account of sympathetic spectatorship set forth in TMS enables us to better understand and criticise the “social dynamics that shape the unjust scrutiny of people living in poverty and undergird political inequality” (Collins, 2020, p. 1044).…”