The Logic of Political Economy, and Other PapersTicknor and Fields, 1859 - 387 pagina's |
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Pagina 5
... present towering upwards towards infinity , would exhibit an edifice eternally , perhaps , renewing itself by parts , but eternally tottering in some parts , and in other parts mouldering eternally into ruins . That science , - which ...
... present towering upwards towards infinity , would exhibit an edifice eternally , perhaps , renewing itself by parts , but eternally tottering in some parts , and in other parts mouldering eternally into ruins . That science , - which ...
Pagina 10
... present going on upon tick , which Argyrippus . views as the sublimest of philosophical discoveries ; whilst the lena violently resists it , as a vile , one - sided policy , patronized by all who happened to be buyers , but rejected ...
... present going on upon tick , which Argyrippus . views as the sublimest of philosophical discoveries ; whilst the lena violently resists it , as a vile , one - sided policy , patronized by all who happened to be buyers , but rejected ...
Pagina 14
... present my office is , not to defend them , but to state them , and to trace their logical deduction ; by which word , borrowed from a case strictly analogous in the modern expositions of the civil law , I understand a process such as ...
... present my office is , not to defend them , but to state them , and to trace their logical deduction ; by which word , borrowed from a case strictly analogous in the modern expositions of the civil law , I understand a process such as ...
Pagina 18
... dialectical appearance of truth must be put down by the fullest exposure of the absolute and hidden truth , since also it will continually happen , ( as it has happened in the present case , ) though a 18 THE LOGIC OF POLITICAL ECONOMY .
... dialectical appearance of truth must be put down by the fullest exposure of the absolute and hidden truth , since also it will continually happen , ( as it has happened in the present case , ) though a 18 THE LOGIC OF POLITICAL ECONOMY .
Pagina 19
Thomas De Quincey. has happened in the present case , ) though a plausible sophism , which had been summarily crushed for the mo- ment by a strong appeal to general good sense upon the absurd consequences arising , will infallibly return ...
Thomas De Quincey. has happened in the present case , ) though a plausible sophism , which had been summarily crushed for the mo- ment by a strong appeal to general good sense upon the absurd consequences arising , will infallibly return ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
50 cents 75 cents Adam Smith affirmative value Ali Pacha amongst answer arise Bertram bust called capital cause CHAPTER circulating capital circumstances Commissioner consequences cost dice difference distinction doctrine effect England English eternal exchange value expression eyes fact father Fitz-Hum forest Goodchild ground guineas hand honor idea instance interest King of Hayti land law of value less logic looked market value Milton mode natural natural price never night original Paradise Lost Paradise Regained POEMS political economy possible pounds present price of wheat principle produce purpose quantity of labor quarters question rate of profit reader rent resistance Ricardo Rudolph Schroll secondly seems sense shillings slaves soil Suli Suliotes suppose teleologic Tempest tendency things thou tion true truth turn value in exchange vols wages and profits wheat whilst whole William word young
Populaire passages
Pagina 118 - Rent is that portion of the produce of the earth, which is paid to the landlord for the use of the original and indestructible powers of the soil.
Pagina 245 - Thus much I should perhaps have said though I were sure I should have spoken only to trees and stones; and had none to cry to, but with the Prophet, O earth, earth, earth!
Pagina 95 - IN making labour the foundation of the value of commodities, and the comparative quantity of labour which is necessary to their production, the rule which determines the respective quantities of goods which shall be given in exchange for each other, we must not be supposed to deny the accidental and temporary deviations of the actual or market price of commodities from this, their primary and natural price.
Pagina 117 - IT remains however to be considered, whether the appropriation of land, and the consequent creation of rent, will occasion any variation in the relative value of commodities, independently of the quantity of labour necessary to production.
Pagina 120 - ... properly drained and manured, and advantageously divided by hedges, fences and walls, while the other had none of these advantages, more remuneration would naturally be paid for the use of one, than for the use of the other ; yet in both cases this remuneration would be called rent.
Pagina 233 - Milton, whether as respects his transcendent merit, or the harshness with which his memory has been treated. John Milton was born in London on the 9th day of December, 1608. His father, in early life, had suffered for conscience' sake, having been disinherited upon his abjuring the popish faith. He pursued the laborious profession of a scrivener, and having realized an ample fortune, retired into the country to enjoy it. Educated at Oxford, he gave his son the best education that the age afforded....
Pagina 6 - acquaintance with the stars" by means of its inevitable and imperishable truth, would become as treacherous as Shakespeare's " stairs of sand": or, like the fantastic architecture which the winds are everlastingly pursuing in the Arabian desert, would exhibit phantom arrays of fleeting columns and fluctuating edifices, which, under the very breath that had created them, would be for ever collapsing into dust. Such, even to this moment, as regards its practical applications, is the science of Political...
Pagina 322 - Holster, in a dutiful petition to the prince, declared that he had not personated his Serene Highness. On the contrary, he had given himself out both before and after his entry into the town of P for no more than the Count Fitz-Hum ; and it was they, the good people of that town, who had insisted on mistaking him for a prince. If they would kiss his hand, was it for a humble individual of no pretensions whatever arrogantly to refuse? If they would make addresses to him, was it for an inconsiderable...
Pagina 234 - L' Allegro, and II Penseroso. In 1637 Milton's mother died, and in the following year he commenced his travels. The state of Europe confined his choice of ground to France and Italy. The former excited in him but little interest. After a short stay at Paris he pursued the direct route to Nice, where he embarked for Genoa, and thence proceeded to Pisa, Florence, Rome, and Naples. He originally meant to extend his tour to Sicily and Greece ; but the news of the first Scotch war, having now reached...
Pagina 317 - ... of an audience. The commissioner represented to the mob that his Highness was made neither of steel nor of granite, and was at length worn out by the fatigues of the day. But to this every man answered that what he had to say would be finished in two words, and could not add much to the prince's fatigue; and all kept their ground before the house as firm as a wall. In this emergency the Count Fitz-Hum resorted to a ruse. He sent round a servant from the back door to mingle with the crowd, and...