| Richard Whately - Economics - 1831 - 282 pages
...scarcity which they are ignorantly supposed to produce, nor credit for the important public service which they in reality perform. They are merely occupied...which this enormous population is fed from day to day. I have said, "no human wisdom;" for wisdom there surely is, in this adaptation of the means to... | |
| George Poulett Scrope - Economics - 1833 - 496 pages
...the supply in proportion to its deficiency, and thus warding off the calamity of famine. The dealers deserve neither censure for the scarcity they are...which this enormous population is fed from day to day*.' The advantages of the division and combination of labour will still further appear, when we... | |
| Richard Whately - Economics - 1847 - 348 pages
...scarcity which they are ignorantly supposed to produce, nor credit for the important public service which they in reality perform. They are merely occupied...which this enormous population is fed from day to day. I have said, " no human wisdom ; " for wisdom there surely is, in this adaptation of the means... | |
| Richard Whately (abp. of Dublin.) - 1847 - 50 pages
...scarcity which they are ignorantly supposed to produce, nor credit for the important public service which they in reality perform. They are merely occupied...which this enormous population is fed from day to day. " I have said, ' no human wisdom ;' for wisdom there surely is in this adaptation of the means... | |
| Richard Whately - Civilization - 1855 - 396 pages
...scarcity which they are ignorantly supposed to produce, nor credit for the important public service which they in reality perform. They are merely occupied...which this enormous population is fed from day to day. with a view to a beneficial end, as we are accustomed to admire (when our attention is drawn to... | |
| James Hamilton - 1855 - 986 pages
...immediate interest — who are merely occupied in gaining a fair livelihood ; and with this end in view, without any comprehensive wisdom, or any need of it,...which this enormous population is fed from day to day — and combine unconsciously to employ the wisest means for effecting an object, the vastncss... | |
| 1855 - 488 pages
...immediate interest—who are merely occupied in gaining a fair livelihood ; and with this end in view, without any comprehensive wisdom, or any need of it,...which this enormous population is fed from day to day—and combine unconsciously to employ the wisest means for effecting an object, the vastness of... | |
| George Dodd - Food supply - 1856 - 568 pages
...scarcity which they are ignorantly supposed to produce, nor credit for the important public service which they in reality perform. They are merely occupied...which this enormous population is fed from day to day." • Let us advance one stage more in the eventful commercial history of the London loaf — from... | |
| Francis Bacon (visct. St. Albans.) - 1856 - 562 pages
...immediate interest — who are merely occupied in gaining a fair livelihood; and with this end in view, without any comprehensive wisdom, or any need of it,...which this enormous population is fed from day to day — and combine unconsciously to employ the wisest means for effecting an object, the vastncss... | |
| Francis Bowen - Economics - 1856 - 590 pages
...back his goods in expectation of a rise. Thus he cooperates, unknowingly, in conducting a system which no human wisdom directed to that end could have conducted...which this enormous population is fed from day to day. " I say, ' no human wisdom ' ; for wisdom there surely is, in this adaptation of the means to... | |
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