| Dugald Stewart - 1855 - 490 頁
...passage, he seems to give up completely the very point for which he had been so long contending. " Money is not the value for which goods are exchanged,...goods, and silver, while money,. is of no other use."* An observation which coincides entirely with that above quoted from Mr. Hume, [p. 338.] From the function... | |
| Dugald Stewart - 1855 - 490 頁
...passage, he seems to give up completely the very point for which he had been so long contending. " Money is not the value for which goods are exchanged,...goods, and silver, while money, is of no other use."* An observation which coincides entirely with that above quoted from Mr. Hume, [p. 338.] From the function... | |
| Dugald Stewart - 1855 - 496 頁
...passage, he seems to give up completely the very point for which he had been so long contending. " Money is not the value for which goods are exchanged,...goods, and silver, while money, is of no other use."* An observation which coincides entirely with that above quoted from Mr. Hume, [p. 338.] From the function... | |
| Henry Varnum Poor - 1877 - 668 頁
...get into circulation. To get out of this dilemma, Law was obliged to assume, to use his own words, that, — " Money is not the value for which goods...goods ; and silver, while money, is of no other use." l In developing his scheme, Law had, undoubtedly, all the time, a sort of consciousness that his land... | |
| Henry Varnum Poor - 1877 - 704 頁
...on what I conceive to be an unsound foundation ; and, he continues, quoting approvingly from Law, " money is not the value for which goods are exchanged, but the value by which they are exchanged." l Now, if value be wholly abstracted from money, what harm can come of the arbitrary operations of... | |
| Henry Varnum Poor - 1877 - 706 頁
...on what I conceive to be an unsound foundation ; and, he continues, quoting approvingly from Law, " money is not the value for which goods are exchanged, but the value by which they are exchanged." * Now, if value be wholly abstracted from money, what harm can come of the arbitrary operations of... | |
| Henry Varnum Poor - 1877 - 674 頁
...a Land Bank 85 Its impracticability 86 Suits his principles to his necessities 86 " Money not tlie value for which goods are exchanged, but the value by which they are exchanged " 86 Land better than silver as a basis of currency 87 Money for domestic exchanges may difler from... | |
| Joseph Shield Nicholson - 1888 - 424 頁
...elementary fragment of monetary science. At any rate, he understood it sufficiently well to write, " Money is not the value for which goods are exchanged,...exchanged ; the use of money is to buy goods and silver, whilst money is of no other use ; " and Adam Smith himself could not better express this " counters... | |
| Joseph Shield Nicholson - 1888 - 402 頁
...stated by John Law, nearly a century before the ' Wealth of Nations ' became famous, in the words : " Money is not the value for which goods are exchanged, but the value by which they are exchanged ; " but, at the same time, it is equally false to imagine that changes in money values only produce... | |
| Joseph Shield Nicholson - 1893 - 444 頁
...clearly stated by John Law, nearly a century before the Wealth of Nations became famous, in the words : " Money is not the value for which goods are exchanged, but the value by which they are exchanged " ; but, at the same time, it is equally false to imagine that changes in money values only produce... | |
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