| Sir William Petty - Economics - 1769 - 566 pages
...called and underftood by either of the three. But that which I would fay upon this matter is, that all things ought to be valued by two natural denominations, which is land and labour j that is, we ought to fay, a fliip or garment is worth fuch a meafure of land, with fuch another meafure... | |
| William Cunningham - Free enterprise - 1892 - 800 pages
...called and understood by either of the three. But that which I would say upon this matter is, that all things ought to be valued by two natural Denominations,...Ships and Garments were the Creatures of Lands and meus Labours thereupon : This being true, we should be glad to find out a natural Par between Land... | |
| William Cunningham - Great Britain - 1892 - 798 pages
...three. Bat that which I would say upon this matter is, that all things ought to be valued by two natoral Denominations, which is Land and Labour ; that is,...say, a Ship or Garment is worth such a measure of Laud, with such another measure of Labour; forasmuch as both Ships and Garments were the Creatures... | |
| Sir William Petty, John Graunt - Economics - 1899 - 422 pages
...called and understood by either of the three. But that which I would say upon this matter is, that all things ought to be valued by two natural Denominations,...Ships and Garments were the creatures of Lands and mens Labours thereupon : This being true, we should be glad to finde out a natural Par between 1 In... | |
| Friedrich Hoffmann - Currency question - 1907 - 308 pages
...p. 25, 18. 6) W. PETTT, Tracts. Dublin 1769. 7) But that which I would say upon this matter is, that all things ought to be valued by two natural denominations, which is land and labour. p. 31. 8) p. 31. 9) But a further, though collateral question may be, how much English money this corn... | |
| Gianni Vaggi - Business & Economics - 1987 - 272 pages
...the quality of the Labour' (Cantillon, 1755, p. 29). He accepts and specifies Petty's indication that 'all things ought to be valued by two natural Denominations, which is Land and Labour' (Petty, 1662, p. 44). The physical costs explanation of prices is based on the simple idea that each... | |
| Makoto Itoh, Makoto Itō - Business & Economics - 1988 - 468 pages
...view that 'labour is the father and active principle of wealth, as lands are the mother',9 or that 'all things ought to be valued by two natural denominations, which is land and labour'.10 Nevertheless he obviously initiates the labour theory of value by asking what is to be the... | |
| Philip Mirowski - Business & Economics - 1991 - 468 pages
...weakness directly; the only place he approaches the problem of Substance is in another oft-quoted passage: All things ought to be valued by two natural Denominations, which is Land and Labour . . . This being true, we should be glad to find out a natural Par between Land and Labour, so as we... | |
| James Maitland Earl of Lauderdale - Business & Economics - 1996 - 184 pages
...called and understood by either of the three. But that which I would say upon this matter is, that all things ought to be valued by two natural Denominations,...measure of Land, with such another measure of Labour; for as much as both Ships and Garments were the Creatures of Lands and Mens Labours thereupon: This... | |
| Antoin E. Murphy, Chūhei Sugiyama - Money - 1997 - 416 pages
...called and understood by either of the three. But that which I would say upon this matter is, that all things ought to be valued by two natural Denominations,...Ships and Garments were the creatures of Lands and mens Labours thereupon: This being true, we should be glad to fmde out a natural Par between Land and... | |
| |