"Avarice, the spur of industry"
About this Quote
Hume’s phrase is a small grenade lobbed into the sentimental story societies like to tell about themselves: that we work hard because we’re virtuous, public-spirited, or “called” to it. “Avarice” is an ugly word, closer to moral rot than healthy ambition. Pairing it with “the spur of industry” doesn’t redeem greed; it weaponizes it, treating vice as an engine. The subtext is coolly unsentimental: human beings are not reliably guided by lofty ideals, but they are predictably guided by self-interest. If you want a stable, productive economy, design institutions that harness the dependable motive rather than praying for the heroic one.
The intent is also defensive. Eighteenth-century Britain was watching commerce expand, luxury goods proliferate, and old moral vocabularies strain to keep up. Critics framed the market as decadence. Hume, a central voice of the Scottish Enlightenment, pushes back with a proto-social-scientific realism: commercial society can civilize by redirecting passions into routines. “Spur” matters here. A spur prods an animal into motion; it isn’t a noble banner, it’s an irritant. Industry, in Hume’s framing, often advances because people itch to acquire, to secure status, to outpace rivals.
That’s why the line still lands. It punctures modern corporate pieties about “mission” and exposes the bargain beneath prosperity: we tolerate a certain amount of grasping because it keeps the machine moving. Hume isn’t celebrating avarice so much as refusing to be shocked by it, insisting that politics and economics start from human nature as it is, not as it should be.
The intent is also defensive. Eighteenth-century Britain was watching commerce expand, luxury goods proliferate, and old moral vocabularies strain to keep up. Critics framed the market as decadence. Hume, a central voice of the Scottish Enlightenment, pushes back with a proto-social-scientific realism: commercial society can civilize by redirecting passions into routines. “Spur” matters here. A spur prods an animal into motion; it isn’t a noble banner, it’s an irritant. Industry, in Hume’s framing, often advances because people itch to acquire, to secure status, to outpace rivals.
That’s why the line still lands. It punctures modern corporate pieties about “mission” and exposes the bargain beneath prosperity: we tolerate a certain amount of grasping because it keeps the machine moving. Hume isn’t celebrating avarice so much as refusing to be shocked by it, insisting that politics and economics start from human nature as it is, not as it should be.
Quote Details
| Topic | Ethics & Morality |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite | Cite this Quote |
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APA Style (7th ed.)
Hume, David. (n.d.). Avarice, the spur of industry. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/avarice-the-spur-of-industry-86684/
Chicago Style
Hume, David. "Avarice, the spur of industry." FixQuotes. Accessed February 2, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/avarice-the-spur-of-industry-86684/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Avarice, the spur of industry." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/avarice-the-spur-of-industry-86684/. Accessed 2 Feb. 2026.
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