| Antoin E. Murphy, Chūhei Sugiyama - 1997 - 368 стор.
...ambitious ideas with respect to the role of money as may be seen from the running subtitle of the book: Money Answers All Things: or, an Essay to make Money...amongst all ranks of people and increase our foreign and domestick trade; fill the empty houses with inhabitants, encourage the marriage state, lessen the number... | |
| Antoin E. Murphy, Chūhei Sugiyama - 1997 - 356 стор.
...Demonstration, in which Way I should be glad to see them handled by such as have Abilities for it. An Essay to make Money sufficiently plentiful amongst all Ranks of People, &c. The bad Circumstances Trade in general hath been in for some Time, which instead of mending seems... | |
| Karl Marx - 2000 - 462 стор.
...Affecting England and the English. Londres, 1855. I. 122; II, 442, 612; III, 937 Vanderlint, Jacob: Monty Answers All Things; or. An Essay to Make Money Sufficiently Plentiful amongst All Ranks of People. Londres, 1734. I, 151, 159-160, 177, 331, 333; II, 380, 402 Verri, Pietro: Meditation! sulla economía... | |
| David Hume - 2003 - 376 стор.
...excise scheme in 1733, which sparked further polemical and theoretical literature (cf. especially Jacob Vanderlint, Money Answers all Things: Or an Essay to make Money sufficiently Plentiful among all Ranks of People . . .). Somewhat similar debates were going on in France simultaneously,... | |
| 1851 - 918 стор.
...benefit of naturalization. But, after being suspended, the privilege was finally cancelled in 1822. MONEY ANSWERS ALL THINGS : or an Essay to make Money...Trade, &c. By Jacob Vanderlint. 8vo. London, 1734. Dugald Stewart has referred to this tract in the appendix to his Life of Adam Smith, and has quoted... | |
| Université libre de Bruxelles. Institut de sociologie - 1914 - 632 стор.
...The principles of economics (1904).] J. II. HOLLANDER a réédité le traité de JACOB YA.NDERLINT : Money answers all things, or an essay to make money...sufficiently plentiful amongst all ranks of people..., publié à Londres en 1734 (Baltimore, the Johns Hopkins Press, 1914, 164 pages). » The essay is one... | |
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