| Alfred Marshall - 1891 - 832 стор.
...themselves into the point of view of the workman ; and without dwelling upon the allowances to be made for his human passions, his instincts and habits,...demand a much more mechanical and regular action than is to be found in real life : and they laid down laws with regard to profits and wages that did not... | |
| Alfred Marshall - 1892 - 496 стор.
...themselves into the point of view of the workman; and without dwelling upon the allowances to be made for his human passions, his instincts and habits,...demand a much more mechanical and regular action than is to be found in real life: and they laid down laws with regard to profits and wages that did not... | |
| William Samuel Lilly - 1892 - 354 стор.
...unreal and mischievous conclusions. He admits, indeed, that the old economists attributed to the force of Supply and Demand a much more mechanical and regular action than they actually have; that they laid down laws with regard to profit and wages which did not really hold, even for England,... | |
| William Jewett Tucker - 1909 - 376 стор.
...of the workman: without allowing for his human passions, his instincts and habits, his sympathies, his class jealousies and class adhesiveness, his want...they actually have: and laid down laws with regard to profit and wages that did not really hold, even for England, in their own time. But their most vital... | |
| 1924 - 812 стор.
...man as so to speak a constant quantity, and gave themselves little trouble to study his variations. They therefore attributed to the forces of supply...mechanical and regular action than they actually have. Their most vital fault was that they did not see how liable to change are the habits and institutions... | |
| 1924 - 702 стор.
...man as so to speak a constant quantity, and gave themselves little trouble to study his variations. They therefore attributed to the forces of supply...mechanical and regular action than they actually have. Their most vital fault was that they did not see how liable to change are the habits and institutions... | |
| T. W. Hutchison - 1978 - 376 стор.
...labour as a commodity without staying to throw themselves into the point of view of the workman . . . They therefore attributed to the forces of supply...demand a much more mechanical and regular action than is to be found in real life: and they laid down laws with regard to profits and wages that did not... | |
| R. D. Collison Black - 1986 - 268 стор.
...in the contexts of money and trade they were 'led astray' particularly in that of distribution; they 'attributed to the forces of supply and demand a much more mechanical and regular action than is to be found in real life: and they laid down laws with regard to profits and wages that did not... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - 1993 - 534 стор.
...man as so to speak a constant quantity, and gave themselves little trouble to study his variations. They therefore attributed to the forces of supply...mechanical and regular action than they actually have. Their most vital fault was that they did not see how liable to change are the habits and institutions... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - 1994 - 582 стор.
...and gave themselves little trouble to study his variations. They therefore attributed to the force of supply and demand a much more mechanical and regular action than they actually have. Their most vital fault was that they did not see how liable to change are the habits and institutions... | |
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