The Glasgow Edition of the Works and Correspondence of Adam Smith: An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nationsClarendon Press, 1976 |
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Página 23
... Physiocrats as a School . While it would be inappropriate to review here the pattern by the appearance of the ... physiocrats as a school is R. L. Meek's The Economics of Physiocracy ( London , 1962 ) . This book includes translations of ...
... Physiocrats as a School . While it would be inappropriate to review here the pattern by the appearance of the ... physiocrats as a school is R. L. Meek's The Economics of Physiocracy ( London , 1962 ) . This book includes translations of ...
Página 47
... physiocrats . Smith gave sufficient recognition to the physiocratic point of view to lend some support to its claims , and that support was especially helpful since the acceptability of their 31 Steuart's general position is perhaps ...
... physiocrats . Smith gave sufficient recognition to the physiocratic point of view to lend some support to its claims , and that support was especially helpful since the acceptability of their 31 Steuart's general position is perhaps ...
Página 48
Adam Smith. doctrines was waning , partly because of the antagonism the physiocrats had engendered from the new and rising industrial groups , whose dislike of physiocracy grew from the support it provided to the large landowners . That ...
Adam Smith. doctrines was waning , partly because of the antagonism the physiocrats had engendered from the new and rising industrial groups , whose dislike of physiocracy grew from the support it provided to the large landowners . That ...
Contenido
Corr Correspondence | 2 |
The Text and Apparatus | 61 |
CHAPTER III | 31 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 17 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
advantage afford agriculture annual produce antient balance of trade bank bank of England Britain Cannan carried cattle cent century Charles II circulating capital coin colonies commerce commodities commonly consequence consumption corn cultivation dealers demand diminish division of labour economic Edinburgh employed employment England equal Essai Europe example exchange expence exportation farmer foreign trade France frequently George III gold and silver greater quantity Hume importation improvement increase industry inhabitants interest land and labour landlord less Loeb Classical Library London maintain manner manufactures ment merchants metals Montesquieu nations natural natural price necessarily occasion paid paper money particular perhaps physiocrats Portugal pound weight pounds present productive labour profit proportion proprietor publick purchase quantity of labour regulated rent revenue rude produce Scotland shillings Smith comments society sometimes sort subsistence tion town value of silver wages of labour wealth whole workmen