A lively and provocative account of Bernard Mandeville and the work that scandalised and appalled his contemporaries¿and made him one of the most influential thinkers of the eighteenth centuryIn 1714, doctor, philosopher and writer Bernard Mandeville published The Fable of the Bees, a humourous tale in which a prosperous hive full of greedy and licentious bees trade their vices for virtues and immediately fall into economic and societal collapse. Outrage among the reading public followed; philosophers took up their pens to refute what they saw as the fable¿s central assertion. How could it be that an immoral community thrived but the introduction of morality caused it to crash and burn? In Man-Devil, John Callanan examines Mandeville and his famous fable, showing how its contentious claim¿that vice was essential to the economic flourishing of any society¿formed part of Mandeville¿s overall theory of human nature. Mandeville, Callanan argues, was perfectly suited to analyse and satirise