Restructure entity storage from per-chapter subdirectories to a flat
canonical set in output/entities/. Each entity exists as a single file;
duplicates across chapters are detected by slug collision and skipped
(first occurrence wins). Chapter views use {{ include }} transclusion
to reference shared entity files.
Add @{existing_entities} macro to extract-entities template so the LLM
knows which entities already exist and focuses on genuinely new ones.
Refactor _call_llm() from _execute_llm() for callers that handle their
own file I/O. 41 unique entities from 4 chapters (2 duplicates removed).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
1.5 KiB
Maritime Commerce
Definition
Trade conducted by sea between ports and coastal regions, as distinct from inland river trade. Smith argues that maritime commerce is the most powerful mechanism for extending markets because it connects distant parts of the world that could never trade overland. The Mediterranean Sea, with its calm waters, numerous islands, and proximate shores, served as the cradle of maritime commerce in the ancient world, enabling the earliest civilisations to trade across vast distances.
Source Chapter
Book 1, Chapter 3: "That the Division of Labour is Limited by the Extent of the Market"
Context
Smith transitions from the London-Edinburgh transport comparison to a global historical argument. Maritime commerce explains why coastal nations civilised first, why the Mediterranean basin was the seat of early civilisation, and why interior continental regions like Africa and Tartary remained undeveloped. The absence of "great inlets" in Africa is contrasted with the Baltic, Adriatic, and Mediterranean in Europe.
Economic Domain
Exchange
Smith's Original Wording
"There could be little or no commerce of any kind between the distant parts of the world. What goods could bear the expense of land-carriage between London and Calcutta?"
Modern Interpretation
Smith's emphasis on maritime trade as the engine of globalisation and development anticipates modern trade theory's focus on shipping costs and port access as determinants of trade volume and economic integration.