和訳お願いします。
The encyclopedic scope of the Wealth of Nations makes it far more than a mere economics treatise. One critic has called it "a history and criticism of all European civilization."Commencing with a discussion of the division of labor, Smith diverges into considerations of the origin and use of money, prices of commodities, wages of labor, profits of stock, rent of land, value of silver, and distinctions between productive and unproductive labor. There follow an account of the economics development of Europe since the fall of the Roman Empire, extended analyses and criticism of the commercial and colonial policies of European nations,the revenue of the sovereign, different methods of defense and administration of justice in primitive societies, the origin and growth of standing armies in Europe, a history of education in the Middle Ages and a criticism of the universities of Smith's time,a history of the temporal power of the church,the growth of public debts,and,in conclution,an examination of principles of taxation and systems of public revenue.