This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
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32252 | After this, how can we see, in Godric and any of those who led the same sort of life, anything else but capitalists? |
4336 | Is it, then, possible to consider the price of the necessaries of life as regulated upon the principle of a common monopoly? |
833 | But why are apologies needed? |
833 | If there prevails a body of popular sentient in favor of sports, why is not that fact a sufficient legitimation? |
833 | So, why not accept these sports as legitimate expressions of a normal and wholesome human nature? |
7361 | Why,said he,"grant a capital of$ 35,000,000 when the first company only had$ 11,000,000?" |
7361 | EMBARRASSMENT OF THE LOCAL BANKS IN 1828 TO 1829.--Is it necessary to mention these embarrassments? |
7361 | Should the Government issue bonds in exchange for gold for the purposes of redemption? |
7361 | The credit of the country would not have suffered by the additional issuance of some final$ 60,000,000(?) |
7361 | Very good, thought business, but how and when will you act accordingly? |
7361 | What then is the role of specie and of bank notes in the course of business in the United States? |
7361 | Why is this? |
7361 | With a major factor unusual in any proposition, how can stability, much less progress, be expected in any interest? |
7361 | have virtually prevented all that? |
33219 | But is it political economy which causes them? |
33219 | Does any one plant fruit trees on the sea sands, or sow corn among rocks? |
33219 | If one bricklayer''s labourer can carry up more bricks than another, why should he be prevented from doing it? |
33219 | Is it a dismal thing to relieve the labourer of his load, or to spread his table with the most nutritious food? |
33219 | Is such a sack fixed or circulating capital? |
33219 | No doubt it is represented by a coin called a sovereign, but what is a sovereign? |
33219 | Shall we say that the meat put into the mouth is directly, but the fork which puts it in is indirectly, useful? |
33219 | There is a popular couplet which says--"When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman?" |
33219 | What is Value?# In exchanging some goods for other goods, there arises the question, How much of one kind shall be given for so much of the other? |
33219 | What is Value?# In exchanging some goods for other goods, there arises the question, How much of one kind shall be given for so much of the other? |
8436 | How did this affect the work each did for the public-- the conveyance of passengers and goods? |
8436 | Is it not clear that, by the equalisation, I pocket £ 1250, and somebody else loses it? |
8436 | It is possible that there might be a profit on the enclosure of Epping Forest: who will now support that reclamation? |
8436 | Lastly, it may be objected, Would the sixteen- pence income tax levied as you propose( or nearly so) raise £ 40,000,000? |
8436 | The question may very fairly be raised, Why stop this process at £ 3? |
8436 | This must be provided out of taxes: are the promoters of reclamation of wastes by Government prepared for this? |
8436 | What would be the effect on the agricultural population? |
8436 | Where now is Reciprocity and where Retaliation? |
8436 | Who is to fix the wages, the hours of labour, and the tale of work for the Government labourers? |
8436 | Will Parliament interfere to protect such horse- purchasers? |
8436 | why not continue the series and develop it into a mathematical law? |
12004 | And why can Flanders do so? |
12004 | But what is wealth? |
12004 | But what shall we say of the workman who made the musical instrument? |
12004 | For what number? |
12004 | For, what is the cause which enables Flanders to undersell Germany? |
12004 | Have wages, in the sense above attached to them, fallen or not? |
12004 | How can he be enriched? |
12004 | How happens it that a firm superstructure has been erected upon an unstable foundation? |
12004 | How, for example, can we obtain a crucial experiment on the effect of a restrictive commercial policy upon national wealth? |
12004 | If these fetters were at once taken off, which of the two countries would be the greatest gainer? |
12004 | Take the science of politics, for instance, or that of law: who will say that these are physical sciences? |
12004 | To produce, implies that the producer desires to consume; why else should he give himself useless labour? |
12004 | Whence comes this anomaly? |
12004 | Why is the admitted certainty of the results of those sciences in no way prejudiced by the want of solidity in their premises? |
12004 | and yet is it not obvious that they are conversant fully as much with matter as with mind? |
20435 | --Sidney Webb,_ Towards Social Democracy?_, 1916.] |
20435 | And who would venture to inquire the tale of the dead? |
20435 | Boon( or Mr. Bliss) would call"the Mind of the Race"? |
20435 | But where, it may well be asked, is the authority which is to begin the neglected education of the nations of Europe? |
20435 | CHAPTER II A sociologist wrote to the Vali of Aleppo, asking: What are the imports of Aleppo? |
20435 | Comment, probable? |
20435 | Does he think that Mr. Asquith would substantially agree with that? |
20435 | Or is our prison so lovely that though the walls fall down we refuse to walk out into the air? |
20435 | Or the country?" |
20435 | The Lord Chancellor adds,"If this is so within a nation, can it be so as between nations?" |
20435 | What is the birth- rate, and the death- rate? |
20435 | What is the nature of the water- supply? |
20435 | What right has he to the other half? |
20435 | Why do we affect the limitation of boundaries that have been already extended? |
20435 | Why then do we cling to the implications of a system that we have grown out of? |
20435 | § 2 Eugenics? |
20435 | § 5 The greater the Capital, the greater the War Profit? |
48446 | But what is to ensure the continuance of that high social productivity which will be necessary to the maintenance of general wellbeing? |
48446 | Do we seem to imply that there is no place in our movement for middle- class intellectuals? |
48446 | Does it not almost seem as if Marx, by 1875, had, for a moment at least, glimpsed the real difficulty? |
48446 | Does this sound alarming? |
48446 | May not socialism tend to promote an_ absolute_ excess of population? |
48446 | We have now to ask, what does Loria consider the most important elements of Marxist teaching? |
48446 | What is this foundation? |
48446 | Will not the inhabitants of each area have to specify some limit beyond which it is undesirable that the population of that area should increase? |
20743 | And did he write the verses? |
20743 | And did you meet Lassalle, too? |
20743 | And was he disciplined? |
20743 | And was his temper cheerful and good-- was he well liked? |
20743 | And where was he-- Marx-- during all this time? |
20743 | Could none of the comrades help them, Hans? |
20743 | Did you ever hear of Robert Blum, my lad? 20743 Liked? |
20743 | Of course, you''ve heard about the International, lad? 20743 Well?" |
20743 | When we got outside-- oh, I forgot to say that the three defendants were acquitted, did n''t I? 20743 Write them? |
20743 | And what did Lassalle think of that?" |
20743 | Aye, did n''t I often think that I''d be glad to hear that he was dead-- glad for his own sake, to think that he was out of pain at last? |
20743 | But Karl smiled quietly, and I thought I could see the old scornful curl of his lip as he said:''Revolution? |
20743 | But what did we care about that? |
20743 | But what sort of years were they? |
20743 | Did he do_ that_?" |
20743 | Did n''t I see him waste away like a plant whose roots are gnawed by the worms? |
20743 | Did n''t I see his frame shake to pieces almost when that cough took hold of him? |
20743 | Did n''t he oppose Weitling and Herwegh and Bakunin on that very ground? |
20743 | Ever read the wonderful verses Freiligrath wrote about him? |
20743 | It was useless, to begin with, for what could such a legion of tailors and cigarmakers and weavers do against the Prussian army? |
20743 | Karl would look right at him and say:''And did you_ really_ listen to the lecture, Comrade So- and- So?'' |
20743 | were you really present when that immortal declaration of the independence of our class was read, Hans?" |
20743 | you made him_ bleed_?" |
38185 | And if one of two things must happen-- either the destruction of fecundity or the destruction of life-- which of the two is the greater evil? |
38185 | And must we say that vice, war, pestilence and famine are desirable to prevent it? |
38185 | But even in this comparatively happy case, shall we count for nothing the years of ascetic sacrifice at which after happiness is purchased? |
38185 | But is this, in itself, desirable? |
38185 | But what is it? |
38185 | But why are there so many unmarried people in the country? |
38185 | Can there be no effectual moral restraint, attended with far less human misery than such physical calamities as these? |
38185 | Does not wisdom tell us that such a sacrifice is a dead loss-- to the warm- hearted often a grievous one? |
38185 | Hence it is demonstrated the ovum is occasionally impregnated in the tubes( why did he not say ovaria? |
38185 | Is it desirable, is it moral, that such women should become pregnant? |
38185 | It has been asked if a general knowledge of checks would not diminish the general increase of population? |
38185 | Must he that becomes diseased be marked as a victim to die for public good, without the privilege of making an effort to restore him to health? |
38185 | Must peace societies excite to war and bloodshed? |
38185 | Must the friends of temperance and domestic happiness stay their efforts? |
38185 | Must the physician cease to investigate the nature of contagion, and to search for the means of destroying its baneful influence? |
38185 | What do, or rather what ought we to mean by organized matter? |
38185 | What might it not have prevented in the Fall River affair? |
38185 | Where now are the feelings and resolve of his youth? |
38185 | Why is there so much prostitution in the land? |
29673 | But whom can they trust? |
29673 | Can he sell these services for real money? |
29673 | Could any one think that this policy involved an aim that was sordid, tending to draw them down, and away from higher considerations of life? |
29673 | Does it yield effective results? |
29673 | How many persons are to be found among one''s acquaintance who feel and act upon any responsibility for doing their"bit"in the creation of capital? |
29673 | IS CIVILIZATION A DISEASE? |
29673 | If an improvement in process is proposed, the question is, Will it pay? |
29673 | Is it a virtue for him to work in order to spend, but a vice for him to work in order to save? |
29673 | Is this the limit? |
29673 | Now, how far does this desire grow to be an aim or object in our lives, and to what extent is such an aim a worthy one? |
29673 | Now, what is the wise choice for the laborer? |
29673 | Shall it be well or ill? |
29673 | The best means of ascertaining this, although it may be only a rough estimate and although errors occasionally creep in is, will they pay? |
29673 | What then are the vices of the money- making aim? |
29673 | What will be the effect on prices of the use of surplus earnings during a period of high wages? |
29673 | Why do so many allow themselves to be dragged along, living from hand- to- mouth, in fear of the knock of the bill collector at the door? |
29673 | Why do we associate money questions with that which is unhappy, unfortunate, down- at- the- heel, with fear and misery? |
29673 | Will they supply a real demand, will they be serviceable? |
37290 | --("What is Property?" |
37290 | Already in his first work,"What is Property?" |
37290 | Does this mean that after the collapse of the old order of society there will be a new class domination culminating in a new political power? |
37290 | His first work,"What is Property?" |
37290 | How can a class which does not work produce more marvellous works than the whole ancient and mediæval world? |
37290 | How has this complicated variety of human thought and action come about? |
37290 | How is this explained, according to Marx? |
37290 | How is this to be explained? |
37290 | How, then, can the equal rate of profit in the case of capitals of different organic composition be harmonised with the theory of surplus value? |
37290 | I begin,''What is Communism?'' |
37290 | In this book("What is Property?" |
37290 | In what measure will commodities exchange with one another? |
37290 | Is that just?" |
37290 | Labour or Capital? |
37290 | Of critical social writers outside Germany it was Proudhon, in particular, who, in his works"What is Property?" |
37290 | Surplus value or profit? |
37290 | The question he put was no longer"What is the substance of wealth and how is it measured?" |
37290 | The question is: How is that to be done? |
37290 | What happens to them? |
37290 | What happens when the capitalist observes that the extraction of absolute surplus value comes up against an insurmountable obstacle? |
37290 | Whence comes this gain, this increase? |
37290 | but"How is its growth and continual accretions to be explained?" |
33946 | And are_ Corporation- Pillars_ a good Foundation? |
33946 | And what will the Capital be, when paid off? |
33946 | Are not our Exports of_ Bullion_ so great, that, as fast as it arrives, it goes away? |
33946 | If Common Interest be reduc''d to Four_ per Cent._ as was intended; what_ Proprietor_ can say he shall be a Loser? |
33946 | Is it not because the_ Devil_, when bought, will be sold? |
33946 | Is it not because you can part with your Property with much more Ease by way of_ Transfer_ in_ London_? |
33946 | Is it so in the_ Exchequer_? |
33946 | Is there not one Man that has_ Honesty_,_ Interest_ or_ Ability_, to put in Practice what is so necessary to_ preserve_ their Country? |
33946 | It is obvious, that One Single Corporation has put us into this Confusion: And will the_ Government_ again trust to_ that_, or any other? |
33946 | It is the Prudence of a_ Government_, to establish_ Credit_ on the most solid Foundation; and what can be so solid as a_ Parliamentary Security_? |
33946 | Ought not then the_ Legislature_ to enter upon speedy_ Measures_, and such as may prevent any_ Evil Consequence_ that may happen? |
33946 | Tell me then, why a Hundred Pound in a Corporation, is more valuable than a Hundred in the_ Exchequer_? |
33946 | What is the Reason that all Inferior Places of Profit and Trust are_ bought_ and_ sold_, and true Merit wants its_ Reward_? |
33946 | Whether either the_ South- Sea_ Company, the Bank of_ England_, or the_ East- India_ Company, desire the_ Ingraftment_ propos''d by Parliament? |
33946 | Will that be more than_ Twenty Five Pounds_ for a_ Hundred_? |
33946 | Will the_ Government_ be trusted with any future Loans, if their Debts are settled upon a_ precarious Bottom_? |
33946 | Will the_ Proposal_ of Tying down the_ Subscribers_ at_ Four Hundred_, give a greater Interest than Ten_ per Cent._ for the Capital? |
13488 | ''By what right does every man possess what he possesses?'' |
13488 | ''What does Ægidius do? |
13488 | ''What, in fact,''says Janet,''is the teaching of St. Peter, St. Paul, and the Apostles in general? |
13488 | ''Whiles it remained was it not thine own,''said St. Peter, rebuking Ananias,''and after it was sold was it not in thine own power? |
13488 | ''[ 1] Is it any wonder that the early Middle Ages were barren of economic doctrines, when this was the best instruction to which they had access? |
13488 | A- t- il le droit de majorer le prix de vente? |
13488 | Again,''Why do you reproach us by saying that men renewed in baptism ought no longer to beget children or to possess fields and houses and money? |
13488 | If, asks Father Kelleher, the common estimation was the final test of just price, why was not moderate usury allowed? |
13488 | Is it not in the same sense that the Fathers condemned slavery as contrary to divine law, while respecting it as comformable to human law? |
13488 | Is there not some difference between individuals? |
13488 | Janet takes the same view of the patristic utterances on this subject:[4]''What do the Fathers say? |
13488 | Some one will say, Are there not among you some poor and others rich; some servants and others masters? |
13488 | The Fathers abound in texts contrary to slavery, but have we not seen a great number of texts contrary to property? |
13488 | Thus Clement of Alexandria devotes a whole treatise to answering the question''Who is the rich man who can be saved?'' |
13488 | Was the Just Price Subjective or Objective? |
13488 | What did they do? |
13488 | Why so? |
13488 | Why, then, should he not simultaneously enter into all three contracts with B? |
13488 | [ 1] Can it be that, as Roscher says,[2] the experiment in communism had produced a chronic state of poverty in the Church at Jerusalem? |
13488 | [ 1]''Is it not by human right? |
13488 | [ 3] Is not this what St. Peter and St. Paul say when they recommended the master to be gentle and good? |
13488 | _ Was the Just Price Subjective or Objective_? |
13488 | cit._, p. 63; Aquinas(? |
13488 | de dépasser le juste prix convenu? |
39949 | ***** But what does all this signify? |
39949 | Given a situation wrought out by the forces under inquiry, what follows as the consequence of the situation so wrought out? |
39949 | How far is it in consonance with hereditary human nature? |
39949 | Neither does it leave room for that other question of normality, What should be the end of the developmental process under discussion? |
39949 | The last step in the chemist''s experimental inquiry into any substance is, What comes of the substance determined? |
39949 | The problem presented to Mr. Clark by the current phenomena of economic development is: how can it be stopped? |
39949 | The question here is: How has this cult of science arisen? |
39949 | The question is rather, What are we doing about it? |
39949 | The question which they ask is always, What takes place next, and why? |
39949 | This race then brought the neolithic culture, but without the domestic animals( or plants?) |
39949 | WHY IS ECONOMICS NOT AN EVOLUTIONARY SCIENCE? |
39949 | What are its cultural antecedents? |
39949 | What are we going to do about it? |
39949 | What has been done in the way of inquiry into this economic life process? |
39949 | What will it do? |
39949 | What will it lead to, when it is made the point of departure in further chemical action? |
39949 | When he asks the question, Why? |
39949 | Why are large coördinations of industry, which greatly reduce cost of production, a cause of perplexity and alarm? |
39949 | Why is one- half our consumable product contrived for consumption that yields no material benefit? |
39949 | Why is the family disintegrating among the industrial classes, at the same time that the wherewithal to maintain it is easier to compass? |
39949 | Why is there a widespread disaffection among the intelligent workmen who ought to know better? |
39949 | [ 2]"Why is Economics not an Evolutionary Science?" |
39949 | and, What foothold has science in the modern culture? |
39949 | and, What is the nature of its hold on the convictions of civilised men? |
39949 | or what follows upon the accession of a further element of force? |
39949 | or, failing that, how can it be guided and minimised? |
38194 | Does it by any means follow from this, that the former kind of labour is more profitable to the community than the latter? |
38194 | Have the exorbitant profits of the merchants of Cadiz and Lisbon augmented the capital of Spain and Portugal? |
38194 | Have they alleviated the poverty, have they promoted the industry, of those two beggarly countries? |
38194 | Have they contributed to encourage the diligence, and to improve the abilities, of the teachers? |
38194 | Have those public endowments contributed in general, to promote the end of their institution? |
38194 | How can it be supposed that he should be the only rich man in his dominions who is insensible to pleasures of this kind? |
38194 | How is it possible to draw from them what they have not? |
38194 | In what way, therefore, has the policy of Europe contributed either to the first establishment, or to the present grandeur of the colonies of America? |
38194 | Is this improvement in the circumstances of the lower ranks of the people to be regarded as an advantage, or as an inconveniency, to the society? |
38194 | Or, if it ought to give any, what are the different parts of education which it ought to attend to in the different orders of the people? |
38194 | Ought the public, therefore, to give no attention, it may be asked, to the education of the people? |
38194 | Voltaire has lately published a small work, called_ Candide, ou l''Optimisme_ I shall give a detail of it----But what is all this to my book? |
38194 | What are these which Europe has derived from the discovery and colonization of America? |
38194 | What goods could bear the expense of land- carriage between London and Calcutta? |
38194 | Why should the dealers in one sort of goods, it seems to have been thought, be more favoured than those in another? |
38194 | Why should we imagine that the precious metals are likely to do so? |
38194 | Why, then, has this doctrine met with so little success, and why does every day diminish its reputation? |
38194 | Would it be a reasonable law to prohibit the importation of all foreign wines, merely to encourage the making of claret and Burgundy in Scotland? |
38194 | and in what manner ought it to attend to them? |
38194 | or why should the merchant exporter be more favoured than the merchant importer? |
33741 | May I not do what I like with my own? |
33741 | Unhappy man that I am; who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
33741 | Why,they ask,"should we not reap in old age the advantage of energy and thrift in youth?" |
33741 | And how can the worker secure these conditions, if as a consumer, he demands cheap goods? |
33741 | And what do they show? |
33741 | But when these{ 135} workers and their sympathizers are deducted, what is"the community"which remains? |
33741 | Do men love peace? |
33741 | Do they desire greater industrial efficiency? |
33741 | Do they value equality? |
33741 | Food, clothing, house- room, art, knowledge? |
33741 | For how can the consumer be supplied with cheap goods, if, as a worker, he insists on higher wages and shorter hours? |
33741 | How are these psychological obstacles to efficiency to be counteracted? |
33741 | How do royalties differ from_ quintaines_ and_ lods et ventes_? |
33741 | How do urban ground- rents differ from the payments which were made to English sinecurists before the Reform Bill of 1832? |
33741 | Is not_ less_ production of futilities as important as, indeed a condition of,_ more_ production of things of moment? |
33741 | May not the"owner"whose rights they are designed to protect not unreasonably reply to their authors,"Thank you for nothing"? |
33741 | The provision of capital? |
33741 | Why is the service supplied by the industry ineffective? |
33741 | Will they have as much freedom, initiative and authority in the service of the community as under private ownership? |
33741 | Would not"Spend less on private luxuries"be as wise a cry as"produce more"? |
33741 | but"What service does it perform?" |
33741 | one simple question may be addressed:--"Produce what?" |
33741 | { 107} Why do they not give their best energies? |
33741 | { 123} VIII THE"VICIOUS CIRCLE"What form of management should replace the administration of industry by the agents of shareholders? |
4239 | And may he not be reduced to the grating necessity of forfeiting his independence, and of being obliged to the sparing hand of charity for support? |
4239 | And that the superior power of population it repressed, and the actual population kept equal to the means of subsistence, by misery and vice? |
4239 | But is this practicable? |
4239 | Can a man consent to place the object of his affection in a situation so discordant, probably, to her tastes and inclinations? |
4239 | Can we judge of the Creator but from his creation? |
4239 | During the next period of doubling, where will the food be found to satisfy the importunate demands of the increasing numbers? |
4239 | He then adds, There is no person who does not see how very distant such a period is from us, but shall we ever arrive at it? |
4239 | How are they to be prevented from making this exchange? |
4239 | How common is the remark that those accidents which are to the indolent a source of disease are forgotten and extirpated in the busy and active? |
4239 | If the energy of my mind had really counteracted the fatigue of my body, why should I feel tired the next morning? |
4239 | In societies arrived at this term, will not this oscillation be a constantly subsisting cause of periodical misery? |
4239 | Is it some mysterious interference of heaven which, at a certain period, strikes the men with impotence, and the women with barrenness? |
4239 | May he not see his offspring in rags and misery, and clamouring for bread that he can not give them? |
4239 | Must not there arrive a period then, when these laws, equally necessary, shall counteract each other? |
4239 | Ought we not then to correct our crude and puerile ideas of infinite Power from the contemplation of what we actually see existing? |
4239 | The sole question is, what is this principle? |
4239 | Thus comfortably situated at present, what are their prospects in marrying? |
4239 | To prove the power of the mind over the body, Mr Godwin observes,"How often do we find a piece of good news dissipating a distemper? |
4239 | What consequences then are we to expect from looking to such a point as our guide and polar star in the great sea of political discovery? |
4239 | What would then be the consequence? |
4239 | Where is the dressing necessary to improve that which is already in cultivation? |
4239 | Where is the fresh land to turn up? |
4239 | Who can imagine that these wonderful faculties are contained in these little bits of matter? |
4239 | Why does he allow this? |
4239 | Why then do not its effects appear in a rapid increase of the human species? |
4239 | Will he not be obliged to labour harder? |
4239 | Will he not lower his rank in life? |
4239 | Will he not subject himself to greater difficulties than he at present feels? |
4239 | and if he has a large family, will his utmost exertions enable him to support them? |
4239 | is it some obscure and occult cause? |
12217 | How will it affect the general interests? |
12217 | # Moral judgments of competition and monopoly.# What should be the attitude of society toward monopoly? |
12217 | # Some lessons from our tariff history.# Can we draw from the checkered course of tariff history in America clear lessons of wisdom for the future? |
12217 | At what point will this movement stop? |
12217 | But what kind of labor is to be taken, that of the lender or that of the borrower or that of some one else? |
12217 | But why should the cycle begin or end at one point of time rather than at another; and what determines the length of the cycle? |
12217 | Can it safely be assumed that every trade with a foreigner is less advantageous than one with a fellow- citizen? |
12217 | Fairchild, in"American Economic Review"( March, 1916),"The standard of living- up or down?"] |
12217 | First the question properly is raised; just what is meant by"natural"? |
12217 | Industrial trusts,--a natural evolution? |
12217 | Is it good or bad as compared with competition? |
12217 | Might it not just as truly, if not more truly, be said that the cause is_ over- confidence_ in the period preceding the crisis? |
12217 | Must we believe that, but for immigration, the native birthrate would not have declined at all? |
12217 | That of the lender, who may be rich, or that of the borrower, who may be poor? |
12217 | The ethical and patriotic thought is not,"How will this affect my interests?" |
12217 | The important question is, Who bears the burden of the higher prices that result from a tariff? |
12217 | The law determines the limits of property, but what determines the limits of the law? |
12217 | The question is raised in many minds: If private property is not an absolute right, what shall be its limits? |
12217 | We are now prepared to take up the question: What determines the ratio at which money exchanges for other goods? |
12217 | What changes should be made in it? |
12217 | What if all the increase went into the industrial arts? |
12217 | What practical or social justification is there for passing and continuing such law? |
12217 | What then are our politico- economic problems in America? |
12217 | What, then, as to individual size and aggregate amount of the profits? |
12217 | What, then, shall be done about it? |
12217 | Which is the better economic situation? |
12217 | Who is to receive the benefits and upon whom and how shall new taxes be levied to pay the cost? |
12217 | Whose sacrifice? |
12217 | Why are not such matters as we have been discussing safely left to individuals? |
12217 | Why may the railway exercise the sovereign power of government as against the private property rights of others? |
12217 | Why then has the fractional coinage a monetary value equal to the standard money, dollar for dollar? |
12217 | Why? |
38047 | And thus hereby a doctrine long since abandoned in economic reasonings is in the way of reappearing; for have we not need of normals and averages? |
38047 | And what shall we say of"inevitable economic tendencies"? |
38047 | And why will these other goods buy it? |
38047 | And will not other competing articles of food have their values increased also? |
38047 | Because men desire it? |
38047 | But does it follow from this that what we may call the social energy of value- giving is a limited thing? |
38047 | But how get at this? |
38047 | But what about value in a situation where there are differences in"purchasing power"? |
38047 | But what phases of the emotional- volitional side of mind are most significant? |
38047 | Can not circumstances arise which will make it vary in amount? |
38047 | Can these monopoly products then call forth a definite amount of social labor? |
38047 | Does the value that leaves the general range of commodities all betake itself to the gold supply? |
38047 | Granted: but what evidence is there of exact equivalence? |
38047 | How are men to be prevented from getting monopolies? |
38047 | How assimilate the one situation to the other? |
38047 | How much of J. S. Mill''s economic system survives? |
38047 | How prevent laws in the interests of the alert and influential? |
38047 | How prevent the monopoly of ideas? |
38047 | If a new want arises, does it necessarily follow that all the old wants become less intense in the exact degree that the new want is intense? |
38047 | If so, marginal utility to whom? |
38047 | Is distribution a price problem or a value problem? |
38047 | Is marginal utility equal to value here? |
38047 | Is value a quantity or a relation? |
38047 | Is value a thing which determines causally exchange relations, or is value determined causally by them? |
38047 | Let these bank credits become unstable: let_ social confidence_ be wiped out, and what happens to general prices and values? |
38047 | Marginal utility determines price? |
38047 | Marginal utility to whom? |
38047 | Must a quantum of value be withdrawn from the old objects precisely equal to that which is attached to the new object? |
38047 | Now have the Austrians done this? |
38047 | Or can they merely call out a definite amount of value? |
38047 | Or, again, what does the system of competition mean? |
38047 | Or, granted that it is limited, does it necessarily follow that the limits are fixed and rigid? |
38047 | Prices are big with the moral tidings they would speak-- shall we read in them only mathematical ratios between quantities of physical objects? |
38047 | Professor Clark elsewhere says:-- But the owner is a part of the social body, and is the organic whole indifferent to his suffering? |
38047 | To whom, then? |
38047 | What connection is there than, between the value of the good and social labour? |
38047 | What has become of the values? |
38047 | What is the relation of the distributive problem to value theory and to price theory? |
38047 | What quantitative relation is there between the satisfaction which an individual man gets from a good and the value of that good? |
38047 | Whom shall she invite? |
38047 | Why do some see in it a benevolent influence, while for others it is a ghastly nightmare? |
38047 | Why do we have such varied estimates from different writers? |
38047 | Will not the value of everything in their store of provisions be increased? |
38047 | Will not the value of the total existing supply of the articles in which there is a failure be raised? |
38047 | Will not their whole stock of wealth have a greater value? |
38047 | Would the sum total of values remain the same? |
10612 | But can we suppose that these things are measured with any approach to accuracy by the wages which are paid in actual fact? |
10612 | But does this money cost to the individual correspond to, and measure, any real cost to the community as a whole? |
10612 | But how far does actual experience bear his assertion out? |
10612 | But how would you proceed to choose? |
10612 | But if it acted in this manner, what essentially would it be doing? |
10612 | But what does it signify? |
10612 | But what exactly does this mean? |
10612 | But what exactly is the secret of the charm of Monte Carlo? |
10612 | But what is capital, and in what does its use consist? |
10612 | But what is likely to be the magnitude of this excess? |
10612 | But, once more, what essentially would you be doing? |
10612 | But, one motor bicycle is as much as he is at all likely to buy, and what becomes, then, of the distinction between total and marginal utility? |
10612 | Can we make any sense of the notion of utility as applying to one of these things, taken by itself? |
10612 | Can we then accord to demand so dignified and to utility so subordinate a place? |
10612 | Could we say that our total real wealth had been doubled? |
10612 | For what is the cost of producing wool, or the cost of producing mutton? |
10612 | How can we speak here with a straight face of the relation between marginal utility and price? |
10612 | How far is it possible to alter that? |
10612 | How is this apportionment effected as things are now? |
10612 | How is this fact to be represented in the diagram? |
10612 | How much, then, of the utility of woollen goods should be attributed to the wool and how much to the textile machinery? |
10612 | How would it decide the number of sheep it would maintain? |
10612 | How, then, can we explain the separate prices of these things by reference to cost alone? |
10612 | How, then, would it proceed? |
10612 | Is it true, even as a broad general rule, that the services which are most arduous and most disagreeable command the highest price? |
10612 | Is risk- taking rewarded if there is any such excess, however small? |
10612 | Let us suppose all this, and ask only the question: How would this executive treat the humdrum case of wool and mutton? |
10612 | More difficult still, to what does rent correspond? |
10612 | Now will any reader make so bold as to say that there is no land under cultivation, in respect of which this net rent is either nil or negligible? |
10612 | Or will it suffice that the gains and losses should average out to a fair rate of interest over the whole industry? |
10612 | There are profits: to what real costs do profits correspond? |
10612 | To what causes is this familiar fact to be attributed? |
10612 | What are its results from the point of view of the community? |
10612 | What are the alternatives which she has been weighing one against the other in that momentary pause? |
10612 | What claim has it to be regarded as an independent factor of production? |
10612 | What is the essence of this waiting, as we have called it? |
10612 | What was it that the argument of § 3 went to show? |
10612 | What would be the return which must be expected from the risky enterprise, in the event of its succeeding, before it will be undertaken? |
10612 | What, then, is likely to be the value and the rent of this marginal land, this land which is just on the"margin of cultivation"? |
10612 | What, then, is the normal relation between price and cost in the case of coal? |
10612 | What, then, might we expect to find if order was nonexistent in the economic world? |
10612 | What, then, will be the rent of a fertile and well- situated farm, about which there is no doubt that it is well worth cultivating? |
10612 | When, therefore, it is said that the prices measure their respective marginal utilities, what exactly is meant? |
10612 | Where will this lead you? |
10612 | Why should it dissipate its profits in this way? |
10612 | Why should not men take their services to the tasks for which they can command a higher reward, and which women can not do as well? |
21623 | Are you in earnest? |
21623 | But where is the money for me? |
21623 | Is it such a fast that I have chosen? 21623 Lord, who shall abide in thy tabernacle? |
21623 | Shall the ax boast itself against him that heweth therewith? 21623 What agreement hath the temple of God with idols?" |
21623 | Wherefore then gavest not thou my money into the bank, that at my coming I might have required mine own with usury or interest? |
21623 | Who is my neighbor? |
21623 | Whose shall these things be? |
21623 | Why should the laws presume to level the rates for a whole state? 21623 ''What will you take?'' 21623 A day for a man to afflict his soul?... 21623 Also I said, The thing ye do is not good: ought ye not to walk in the fear of our God, because of the reproach of the nations, our enemies? 21623 And when one buys a farm for money does not that farm produce other money yearly? 21623 And whence is derived the profit of the merchant? 21623 Antonio--And what of him? |
21623 | But were not the people of Israel discharged to take any usury or profit for lent money from their brethren? |
21623 | Could there be a more absurd application of a Scripture passage? |
21623 | Did he take interest?" |
21623 | Do not rich men oppress you, and draw you before the judgment seats? |
21623 | Do not they blaspheme that worthy name by which ye are called?" |
21623 | Do they on this account deny themselves any of the good things of this life? |
21623 | Have we not the rights of the cattle? |
21623 | His ear is deaf to the voice,"Is not this the fast that I have chosen? |
21623 | How do you prove from scripture, that moderate usury, or common interest, is not oppression in itself? |
21623 | How do you prove that moderate usury is lawful? |
21623 | How great a benefit can he gain by it? |
21623 | Is it lawful to take any interest or gain for money lent? |
21623 | Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast out to thy house?" |
21623 | Is it warrantable to take interest from the poor? |
21623 | Is money born from roofs and walls? |
21623 | Is not this the fast that I have chosen?... |
21623 | Is the gaining of money by usury unlawful? |
21623 | Or is your gold and silver, ewes and rams?" |
21623 | Psalm 15:"Jehovah, Who shall sojourn in thy tabernacles? |
21623 | The question is frequently discussed in church circles,"How can the laboring man be attracted to the churches?" |
21623 | The question is, how rapidly can he earn, and how soon can his earnings be collected? |
21623 | Thus we have in Isaiah 43:13:"I will work and who will let( hinder) it?" |
21623 | To undo the heavy burdens and to let the oppressed go free?... |
21623 | Was this inserted to make interest good? |
21623 | We clip the following story:"Why do you borrow money for so short a time?" |
21623 | Were not the Israelites forbidden to take usury from their brethren, whether poor or rich? |
21623 | What can the borrower do or make with this capital? |
21623 | What does a house from the letting of which I receive a rent? |
21623 | What does the sea beget? |
21623 | What is it to take usury, according to the proper signification of the word? |
21623 | What is the unlawful profit for money, which may be called usury? |
21623 | What is the usury condemned in scripture and by what reason? |
21623 | What is this loan worth to you? |
21623 | What is usury? |
21623 | What kind of usury or interest is lawful? |
21623 | What shall we believe was the question? |
21623 | Who doubts that idle money is wholly useless? |
21623 | Who shall dwell in thy holy hill? |
21623 | Who shall dwell in thy holy hill? |
21623 | Will you do it?" |
21623 | or shall the saw magnify itself against him that shaketh it? |
31159 | Shall we adopt this new machine? |
31159 | Shall we enter this new market? |
31159 | Shall we make this new product? |
31159 | Are there some who are thus the especial martyrs of progress, suffering for the general good? |
31159 | But why is it that, at two dollars, the definite number of one thousand barrels is the amount that is taken and paid for? |
31159 | Do any of them tend to bring themselves to a halt? |
31159 | Do we not want great corporations with vast capitals? |
31159 | Does it favor the consumers by giving falling prices, and hurt producers in the same degree? |
31159 | Does it help to establish wages on the basis of the productivity of labor, and does it do it without much reducing that productivity? |
31159 | Does it rob borrowers and enrich lenders? |
31159 | Does it tax enterprise and paralyze the nerves of business? |
31159 | Does the economic law of wages operate at all when civil law steps in to the extent of creating any tribunal of arbitration? |
31159 | Does the standard of living itself tend to rise with the rise of wages and to remain above its former level? |
31159 | Does this mean that the consolidations themselves are thus condemned? |
31159 | How can the judges directly ascertain how much a final increment of social labor produces? |
31159 | How does the grocer know that he can make five per cent with the final unit of capital that he borrows? |
31159 | How is it when a tribunal of arbitration has studied the case and announced a decision? |
31159 | How many mechanical operations go to the making of a bicycle, an automobile, or a steam yacht? |
31159 | How many plants does the consolidated corporation own? |
31159 | How much did they cost? |
31159 | How, for example, is commerce with undeveloped regions to be regarded if we have the center only in view? |
31159 | How, then, do we measure the true product of a single unit of labor? |
31159 | If it benefits them in the end, will it impose on them an immediate hardship? |
31159 | If there are no such standards having universal validity, are there any that are valid within single geographical divisions? |
31159 | Is any change on which we rely for the hopeful outlook we have taken self- terminating? |
31159 | Is money a dynamic agent, and can it be so regulated as to induce economic progress? |
31159 | Is the dynamic movement self- retarding and will it necessarily halt? |
31159 | Is there a rate at which the pay of labor in Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia, and America tends to settle and remain? |
31159 | Is there an economic law that in any way guarantees it? |
31159 | Is this more than a possibility? |
31159 | Must the society of the future purchase its comforts at the cost of its character? |
31159 | Now, if a man has to buy the whole bundle, must he pay one hundred dollars plus fifty plus twenty plus ten, or one hundred and eighty for the whole? |
31159 | On what principle can we divide the earth into sections for economic purposes? |
31159 | Should a court then take as its standard of just wages what unorganized labor gets when it works for independent employers? |
31159 | What does this mean? |
31159 | What have been their earnings during recent years? |
31159 | What if gold gains two per cent in value, instead of one, during the second of the periods? |
31159 | What is their present state of efficiency? |
31159 | What limits the power of a single new and economical process to eject laborers from their accustomed places of employment? |
31159 | What would be the effect of any practical measure of inflation? |
31159 | When men make gains can they hold them, or, at any rate, some part of them, or must they fall back to the level at which they started? |
31159 | Why is the equation of demand and supply established at exactly that price? |
31159 | Why should not the amount of his present privation increase, when the surplus of benefit he can gain by it at a future date grows greater? |
31159 | Why should we not, with our wide range of resources, make everything? |
31159 | Will an economical device bring an adequate return to the man who discovers it and to the man who introduces it into productive operations? |
31159 | Will it blight enterprise by making men afraid to build mills, railroads, etc.? |
31159 | Will it even make certain ones pay heavily for a gain that is shared by all classes? |
31159 | Will it make laboring men better off or worse off? |
31159 | Will the fall check business and make men afraid to buy stocks of goods? |
31159 | Will the further fall of prices rob the_ entrepreneurs_? |
31159 | Would a secure monopoly do something like this? |
31159 | _ Effects of Changes in the Rate of Appreciation._--What happens if the rate of appreciation changes? |
31159 | _ How the Increase of a Miscellany of Goods has to be Computed._--How does the real earning capacity of capital in concrete forms reveal itself? |
31159 | _ Opposite Reasons for Favoring Gold as a Basis of Currency._--What, then, is our practical conclusion? |
31159 | _ The Effect on Progress of Consolidation without Monopoly._--Does a monopoly live under any such forward pressure? |
33310 | Might reduce the price of raw produce to the cost of production? |
33310 | Why,asks M. Say,"does an individual wish to sell his land? |
33310 | Will it be said that the farmer, he who furnishes labour and capital, will, jointly with the landlord, bear the burden of this tax? 33310 Without doubt this would be a great encouragement given to manufactures and trade; but would it be just? |
33310 | Are the powers of wind and water, which move our machinery, and assist navigation, nothing? |
33310 | But from what fund would those pay the tax who produce corn without paying any rent? |
33310 | But from which of these sources of fluctuation is corn exempted? |
33310 | But how would the interest of the landlord be affected? |
33310 | But where is the proof of this? |
33310 | Can they multiply, if a tax takes from them a part of their wages, and reduces them to bare necessaries? |
33310 | Could not their advancement be obtained at any other price? |
33310 | Does nature nothing for man in manufactures? |
33310 | Does not Mr. Malthus himself, state it never to be so? |
33310 | Has a merchant an income equal to all the sales which he makes in the course of a year? |
33310 | How is it to be ascertained whether English money has fallen, or Hamburgh money has risen? |
33310 | How then can money, or gold and silver, exchange for more corn in rich, than in poor countries? |
33310 | How then can prices be raised by high profits? |
33310 | How would such land, as M. Say describes in the following passage, pay a tax of one- half or three- fourths of its produce? |
33310 | If capital to any extent can be employed by a country, how can it be said to be abundant compared with the extent of employment for it? |
33310 | If it does not raise it in comparison with other commodities, where is the injury to the home consumer, beyond the inconvenience of paying the tax? |
33310 | If the state claim of him the fifth part of his augmented income, will there not remain 4000 francs of increase to stimulate his further exertions?" |
33310 | In what are they essentially different? |
33310 | In what then does the advantage of the stipulation in the treaty consist? |
33310 | Is it ever for any length of time either above or below this price? |
33310 | Is it possible that Mr. Buchanan can seriously assert, that the produce of the land can not be increased, if the demand increases? |
33310 | Of what advantage or disadvantage then is the treaty to either party? |
33310 | Of what benefit would it be to the community? |
33310 | Should this be the case, should the consumption be diminished, will not the supply also speedily be diminished? |
33310 | The pressure of the atmosphere and the elasticity of steam, which enable us to work the most stupendous engines-- are they not the gifts of nature? |
33310 | Thus, when gold is said to be dearer in England than in Spain, if no commodity is mentioned, what notion does the assertion convey? |
33310 | Under such circumstances, could corn rise in exchangeable value with other things? |
33310 | What can value have to do with the power of feeding and clothing? |
33310 | What has happened? |
33310 | What is the consequence? |
33310 | What should we say of an establishment which should regularly supply half the clothiers with their wool under the market price? |
33310 | Who can have any motive to produce it, before any demand exists for an additional quantity? |
33310 | Who is to produce it? |
33310 | Why does another wish to purchase this same land? |
33310 | Why should corn and vegetables alone be excepted? |
33310 | Why should the manufacturer continue in the trade if his profits are below the general level? |
33310 | Would not the abundance of those peculiar products of the earth cause a rise of rent, if the demand for them at the same time increased? |
33310 | [ 33] Is the following quite consistent with M. Say''s principle? |
33310 | [ 41] Are not the following passages contradictory to the one above quoted? |
33310 | [ 53] Of what increased quantity does Mr. Malthus speak? |
33310 | [ 6] Has not M. Say forgotten, in the following passage, that it is the cost of production which ultimately regulates price? |
33310 | and can rent ever rise, whatever the commodity produced may be, from abundance merely, and without an increase of demand? |
33310 | and would not the labourer thus obtain his usual portion? |
33310 | per annum to agriculture, to manufacturers, and to commerce, when a borrower may be found ready to pay an interest of 7 or 8 per cent.? |
33310 | per annum, when another borrower having little credit, would give 7 or 8?" |
33310 | will not its value be increased, in consequence of the rise of labour? |
14943 | And what, for goodness''sake, are you two going to do in_ Persia_? |
14943 | And where, may I ask, are you planning to begin this married career you seem to contemplate? |
14943 | Brave? |
14943 | But why? |
14943 | Did you ever know the Government to give you a week''s time to begin? |
14943 | From where, then, can we gain recruits for this minority? 14943 How many of the girls are going together?" |
14943 | How shall I answer Mr.----''s about that job? |
14943 | Is he as lovely as that to his own? |
14943 | Is it far from here? |
14943 | Mother, there never really_ was_ such a baby,_ was_ there? |
14943 | What did the union stand in the way of? 14943 Where am I to sleep?" |
14943 | Who gets her own way one hundred per cent? |
14943 | Who never gets his own way and never wants to get his own way? |
14943 | Who''s that? |
14943 | Why is that? |
14943 | You sprung a new necktie on me this morning, did n''t you? |
14943 | _ Persia_? |
14943 | ''How many of the migratory laborers know when conditions are ripe to"start something"?'' |
14943 | ( Each time Carl would plead,"I do n''t have to wear a stiff collar, do I?" |
14943 | ("Where are my rubbers?" |
14943 | After excluding them, what shall we do with them? |
14943 | After greetings, always the question,"How''s my June- Bug?" |
14943 | And I would sigh, and say,"Oh dear, would n''t it?" |
14943 | And does a man go steerage to Europe if he has a lot of money in the bank?" |
14943 | And"Mother, there never really_ was_ such a baby,_ was_ there?" |
14943 | Are they all killed, perhaps? |
14943 | Can you see my father''s face that sunny March day,--Charter Day it was,--when we told him we were engaged? |
14943 | Can you see my father? |
14943 | Could he come over to the house and spend the rest of the afternoon? |
14943 | Could we finance an added year at, perhaps, Wisconsin? |
14943 | Did she marry a soldier, and is she too, perhaps, a widow? |
14943 | Do n''t you know that some man with eloquent tongue, without conscience, who did not care for the nation, could put this whole country into a flame? |
14943 | Do n''t you know that this country, from one end to the other, believes that something is wrong? |
14943 | Fairly early in the conversation he found breath to say,"And what, may I ask, are your prospects?" |
14943 | Friends would ask me:"What is the news from Carl?" |
14943 | He called down gayly,"How do you do, young lady?" |
14943 | He said:"Do you know what I''ve been thinking of so much this morning? |
14943 | He would fix the catch on the front- door lock, then come upstairs, calling out softly,"You awake?" |
14943 | He would say:"I am so tired-- can''t you people come to some agreement, so that I can go home and sleep?" |
14943 | How had we ever managed to pack a year so full, and live to tell the tale? |
14943 | I say so often that I stand right now the richest woman in the world-- why talk of sympathy? |
14943 | I wonder if, in your childhood, some frightening picture in some old book was not the thing that you are still fighting against? |
14943 | If not, how are they to know? |
14943 | If there was to be a rally or a concert, the Senior sitting at the head of the dinner- table would ask,"How many are going to- night with a man?" |
14943 | It used to be that Carl and I, in passing the littlest bit of a hovel, would say,"We could be perfectly happy in a place like that, could n''t we? |
14943 | Just feeling sort of spunky about it-- just wanting to show some one that time is nothing to you-- what''s the hurry? |
14943 | Not only, in whose hands has industrial capitalism for the moment fallen, but in what direction does the evolution of control tend? |
14943 | Of course he saw the war- emergency need of it just then, but what he wanted to work on was, why were mediations ever necessary? |
14943 | Once in a while he''d sigh and say,"A little ranch up on the Clearwater would go pretty well about now, would n''t it, my girl?" |
14943 | That was his great spark, was n''t it?" |
14943 | The Idaho stories he could tell-- oh, why can I not remember them word for word? |
14943 | The impossible person hemmed and stammered:"Why-- er-- when did it arrive?" |
14943 | Then he was full of ideas for a second article he had promised the"Atlantic"--"Is the United States a Nation?" |
14943 | Then he would place his hands on my shoulders, beam all over, eyes twinkling, and say:--"Who''s boss of this household, anyway?" |
14943 | Then, to me,"Are you going with Carl?" |
14943 | Then-- oh, what_ motif_ in music could do a Del Monte breakfast justice? |
14943 | Time and time again, these months, I have thought, what do any of us know about what another person_ feels_? |
14943 | To prohibit or greatly restrict immigration would bring forth class conflict within a generation,''what does it mean? |
14943 | Was her Poland home in the devastated country? |
14943 | We assumed in our prosperity the luxury of a maid-- the unparalleled Anna Bederke aus Rothenburg, Kreis Bumps(? |
14943 | We must stay longer,--from one to two years longer,--but how, alas, how finance it? |
14943 | What business had automobiles where children should be free to play? |
14943 | What conditions did the trust desire to establish with which the union would interfere? |
14943 | What could be said for the human wisdom of a civilization that placed traffic above child- life? |
14943 | What does it mean? |
14943 | What is it this time?" |
14943 | What is the relationship between the dominating employing figure in American industrial life and the men who work? |
14943 | What is_ seeming_? |
14943 | What then are these economic causes which account for the hostility? |
14943 | What will my grandmother say when she knows that her bridal gift resided for some days in a Boston pawnshop? |
14943 | When we exclaimed to him over his goodness,--of course we paid the sixty- five dollars,--all he said was:"Do you think a doctor is blind? |
14943 | Where in the world shall we be?" |
14943 | Whoever would have guessed it, in all the world? |
14943 | Why Persia? |
14943 | Why are economists mute in the presence of a most obvious crisis in our industrial society? |
14943 | Why have our criticisms of industrialism no sturdy warnings about this unhappy evolution? |
14943 | Why? |
14943 | Why_ do n''t_ they let me find you?" |
14943 | Would it then be so out of place if I, his wife, could write of all of him, even to the manner of husband he was? |
14943 | and"Where''s your speller?" |
14943 | if so, what must we give up? |
14943 | strike?'' |
14943 | what social and economic order would best ensure absence of friction?) |
14943 | where?) |
17196 | And what passed between you?''" |
17196 | Did we ever tell you,writes Wilson,"what Dr. Adam Smith said to Mr. William Adam, the Council M.P., last summer in Scotland? |
17196 | Did you ever hear of such madness and folly as our clergy have lately fallen into? 17196 Well then,"continued Smith,"do you think that was worth printing?" |
17196 | What are the advantages to the public and the State from grazing? 17196 Who could refuse?" |
17196 | Who shall we have to dinner? |
17196 | Why,he asked,"can you not learn to speak the English language, as you have already learnt to write it? |
17196 | ''And what did you reply?'' |
17196 | ''My father,''said Calas,''can you bring yourself to believe that I was guilty?''" |
17196 | ''What did Johnson say?'' |
17196 | A visitor one day, casting his eye on these books, asked Campbell,"Have you read all these books?" |
17196 | After listening to Smith one evening, the great player turned to a friend and whispered,"What say you to this? |
17196 | Amicus says Smith expressed particular pleasure with one couplet-- Say, Stella, feel you no content, Reflecting on a life well spent? |
17196 | And if here and there a graduated Doctor should be as ignorant as an old woman, where can be the great harm? |
17196 | Bating the unhandsomeness of the practice, however, I would ask in what manner does the public suffer by it? |
17196 | But if all that had been done, what would have become of my History? |
17196 | But ought it in this case to avail him at all? |
17196 | But what is all this to my book, say you? |
17196 | Could you promise us recommendations to the Comte d''Eu, to the Archbishop of Narbonne, and to the Intendant? |
17196 | Did Smith graduate? |
17196 | Did he foresee the Revolution? |
17196 | Do not all the old women in the country practise physic without exciting murmur or complaint? |
17196 | For Hutcheson in the course of his lectures expressly raises and discusses the question, Can we reduce our moral sentiments to sympathy? |
17196 | Has he gone abroad because he can not contrive to get himself sufficiently persecuted in Great Britain? |
17196 | Have they a better principle of vitality than others, that they should be more frequently preserved? |
17196 | He is there in February 1774, for Hume writes him in that month,"Pray what accounts are these we hear of Franklyn''s conduct?" |
17196 | How can you so much as entertain a thought of publishing a book full of reason, sense, and learning to those wicked abandoned madmen? |
17196 | How does the Painter go on? |
17196 | How then was the net product to be increased? |
17196 | In what circumstances the rents of lands should be paid in money? |
17196 | Is it not something to say for a science that its three greatest masters were about the three best men I ever knew? |
17196 | Is it published? |
17196 | Is not truth more than meat, and wisdom than raiment? |
17196 | Johnson?" |
17196 | Nor apparently had Smith as yet delivered her letter to Garrick, for she asks,"Vous ne l''avez pas encore vu Mr. Smith? |
17196 | Permettez- moi de vous demander, si nous aurons bientôt une édition complète des oeuvres de votre illustre ami M. Hume? |
17196 | Pray what strange accounts are these we hear of Franklyn''s conduct? |
17196 | Shall I go backwards or forwards in my History? |
17196 | The Earl of Buchan, apostrophising Smith, asks,"Oh, venerable and worthy man, why was you not a Christian?" |
17196 | The latter is a very honest fellow and deserves to be a bishop; make him one if you can.... Why will you triumph and talk of_ platte couture_? |
17196 | Townshend? |
17196 | Was Hume a Theist? |
17196 | Was Mallet anywise hurt by his publication of Lord Bolingbroke? |
17196 | Were I a_ galante_ writer now, what a fine contrast might I make between you and Queen Mary? |
17196 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of gentlemen of estate being farmers? |
17196 | What are the most proper measures for a gentleman to promote industry on his own estate? |
17196 | What is the best and most equal way of hiring and contracting servants? |
17196 | What is the best and most proper duration of leases of land in Scotland? |
17196 | What is the meaning of the bargain that your ministry have made with the India Company? |
17196 | What is the reason? |
17196 | What is the reason? |
17196 | What proportion of the produce of lands should be paid as rent to the master? |
17196 | What think you of this? |
17196 | What was the effect of small notes? |
17196 | What, we find them asking, are the effects of paper money on prices? |
17196 | Whatever could have been the reason for this sudden coolness of the Duke? |
17196 | Whether corn should be sold by measure or by weight? |
17196 | Whether great or small farms are most advantageous to the country? |
17196 | Why does so large a proportion of Smith''s extant letters consist of letters of introduction? |
17196 | Why this complete boycott of Hume by his own household? |
17196 | Will you permit me to leave you the property of the copy, in case they should not be published in five years after my decease? |
17196 | Would it be proper to send him any present or fee? |
17196 | Would not such a regulation be oppressive upon all private teachers, such as the Hunters, Hewson, Fordyce, etc.? |
17196 | [ 125] But when so much is plainly the insensible creation of the imagination, what reliance can be placed on the remainder? |
17196 | [ 204] What has become of Rousseau? |
17196 | _ Apropos_ to the Pope and the Pretender, have you read Hook''s Memoirs? |
17196 | and if the monopoly of the trade of the continent be contrary to the rights of mankind, how can that of the islands be agreeable to these rights? |
17196 | and in what time they should be paid? |
17196 | and what is the most proper method to abolish the practice of giving of vails? |
17196 | and what ought to be most encouraged in this country? |
17196 | and whether a union with Ireland would be advantageous to Great Britain? |
17196 | does it sell at all? |
17196 | does it sell ill? |
17196 | does it sell well? |
17196 | eh, flabby, eh?" |
17196 | in what in kind? |
17196 | on the currency? |
17196 | on the exchanges with other countries? |
17196 | what from corn lands? |
17196 | what of notes not payable on demand? |
36345 | ... Have you seen Monsieur Say''s[ Catec]hisme d''Economie Politique? |
36345 | 1815?_] MY DEAR SIR, I have an account before me of the capital actually employed on a farm of 200 acres in Essex. |
36345 | ; tracts on East India College, 125, and see Haileybury; Utilitarian view of his subject, 175; article( by him?) |
36345 | And have I come a bit nearer to this knowledge by admitting that whatever the value may be it will be divided between two persons? |
36345 | And what standard of_ value_ would there then be? |
36345 | And, if they do, why should not money vary as compared with corn and labour by the same law as all other commodities do? |
36345 | Are you not weary?... |
36345 | Besides, what would be the peril in case of war?'' |
36345 | But how have the latter their value? |
36345 | But how long will[ people] continue to indulge in luxuries at the expense of a continual diminution of capital? |
36345 | But is not this true also of any variable measure you could fix on? |
36345 | Can you be said to have given a good reason for the selection which you have made of a measure of value when it will not bear close examination? |
36345 | Did you ever believe that I thought fifty oak trees would cost as much labour as the stone wall? |
36345 | Do they so? |
36345 | Do you think I shall have any chance of meeting you there? |
36345 | Does it signify whether it be labour or any other thing, provided there be no reason to suspect that it has altered in value? |
36345 | Granted; but, if it be true, how can your measure measure commodities produced with labour and profits united? |
36345 | Have you not said so? |
36345 | Have you not too uniformly supported the opinion that a fall in the price of corn will occasion a fall in the price of commodities? |
36345 | Have you read the report of the Lord[s''] Committee on the Corn question? |
36345 | Have you seen Torrens''Letter to Lord Liverpool[127]? |
36345 | Have you seen Torrens''letters to the Earl of Lauderdale in the''Sun?'' |
36345 | Have you seen the Review of M. Say and myself in the British? |
36345 | How can it be said that the cost of producing hats is reduced by a fall of profits, if a fall of profits must be accompanied by a rise of wages? |
36345 | How can you( he says) determine the quantity and quality of the labour except by the price paid to obtain it? |
36345 | How does that operate on the interests of mankind? |
36345 | I ask why? |
36345 | If I should not be gone, will you do me the favour of dining with me on Friday at Mr. Basevi''s? |
36345 | If a hundred of these persons were to come amongst us with their capital, skill, etc., would not the same consequences follow as I have just stated? |
36345 | If land is less in demand, must not the rent of it fall? |
36345 | If money be a commodity does[_ sic_] not corn and labour enter into its price or value? |
36345 | If so, why should not that commodity vary in reference to corn in the same degree as any home made commodity? |
36345 | If there were no such rise, what could prevent population and capital from increasing without limit? |
36345 | If they act on each other as you think, but to which I do not agree, how can manufactures rise in price with a stationary price of corn? |
36345 | If they must admit the medium to be variable-- and who could deny it?--then what became of the argument?'' |
36345 | In saying this do you mean to deny that facility of production will lower natural price, and difficulty of production raise it? |
36345 | In this case I ask you whether corn has fallen in value in the proportion of thirty to twenty- two? |
36345 | In what manner could we have any correct account of the college and its concerns but from an interested party? |
36345 | Is it not true of iron, copper, lead, cloth, corn, etc., etc.? |
36345 | Is not his criticism very much strained as to the use of the word depreciation? |
36345 | Is not this a ridiculous piece of mockery, and an insult to our common sense? |
36345 | Is not this supposing two rates of profit at the same time? |
36345 | Is not this the natural consequence of more capital being employed on manufactures and less on agriculture? |
36345 | Is there any probability of my seeing you at Bath? |
36345 | Might we not by importation appropriate to ourselves a larger proportion of the mass of money distributed amongst all the countries of the world? |
36345 | Now does this positive value refer to the same quantity of wheat? |
36345 | Should there be limitations where an artificial range of prices has been created by continued protection? |
36345 | Should we obtain the same quantity of deals from Norway in exchange for a given quantity of tin as we now do? |
36345 | Such and such evils may exist; but the question is do they exist now? |
36345 | The first point to be considered is, what is the interest of countries in the case supposed? |
36345 | The interest of the community then is what? |
36345 | The second what is their practice? |
36345 | This is incontestable; but what consequence can you draw from it for our practical guidance? |
36345 | To what causes, I mean permanent causes, can these variations be attributed? |
36345 | What can induce him to persevere in representing utility and value as the same thing? |
36345 | What do you think of Mr. Vansittart''s financial talents? |
36345 | What has this to do with demand? |
36345 | What point will next engage your attention? |
36345 | What profits? |
36345 | What then becomes of my sinking fund? |
36345 | What we want to know is what the number of those divisions are, or what the value of the commodity is, whether eight, seven, or six? |
36345 | When will the supply not be affected by the increased or diminished number? |
36345 | Where shall you pass your holidays? |
36345 | Who can say that a plague which should take off half our people would not alter the value of labour? |
36345 | Who could speak of its management, attainments, and discipline, but those who were acquainted with it? |
36345 | Why is it small but because the value of labour is high? |
36345 | Why should he be so fortunate on the first trial? |
36345 | Why? |
36345 | Will Ministers be able to carry the Income Tax[129]? |
36345 | Will it be possible to remain at peace if Bonaparte establishes himself as sovereign of France? |
36345 | Will you not stay with us whilst you are in town? |
36345 | Would the demand compared with the supply of capital be the same in both? |
36345 | You ask:''Would you really say that cloth and muslin were not dear in India where they cost four or five times as much labour as in England?'' |
36345 | You now say''where have I made the supposition you impute to me? |
36345 | Yours does; what profits are there in shrimps or in gold picked up by daily labour, on account of the labourer, on the sea- shore? |
36345 | [ At the end is written in pencil in Malthus''s handwriting,''Was any bullion imported from Hamburg in March?''] |
36345 | and, if he did want the will, would he feel no inclination to add the increase of his revenue to his capital and employ it as such? |
36345 | ii:''Is the general principle''of free trade''liable to limitations in the case of a country more heavily taxed than other growing countries?'' |
36345 | iii,''Is the loss which the course of exchange marks upon the trade of Great Britain with France real or apparent?'' |
36345 | whatever might be the price of labour the following year? |
42759 | [ 52] How can this be true, when it is possible to build a competing line on an adjoining and parallel street? 42759 Are they justified in seeking any more at the cost of the consumer? 42759 Are they not obliged to divide it equally? 42759 Basil of Cæsarea:Will not the man who robs another of his clothing be called a thief? |
42759 | By what principles shall these questions be answered? |
42759 | By what rule was equality to be measured and value determined? |
42759 | By what title is he to acquire these? |
42759 | Can not the land be bought at a reasonable price? |
42759 | Can nothing be done to reduce the size and lessen the number of these great accumulations? |
42759 | Can they be justly required to undergo this inconvenience for the benefit of labourers who are already getting the"equitable minimum"? |
42759 | Do the socially produced land values necessarily belong to the producer, society? |
42759 | Does it forbid any attempt by society to limit exceptionally large profit- incomes? |
42759 | Does not private ownership of its very nature demand that increases in the value of the property should go to the owners thereof? |
42759 | Does not the assumption rest upon a misconception of the moral validity of production as a canon of distribution? |
42759 | Does the abstract right of the landless man become a concrete right which is so strong as to justify confiscation? |
42759 | Does the equal right to use the bounty of nature include the right to equal_ shares_ of land, or land values, or land advantages? |
42759 | Does the locomotive engineer produce more than the section hand, the bookkeeper more than the salesman, the ditch digger more than the teamster? |
42759 | Does the right to own a piece of land necessarily include the right to take its rent? |
42759 | For what are we but tenants for a day? |
42759 | HILLQUIT- RYAN: Socialism: Promise or Menace? |
42759 | Has a monopoly a right to take surplus gains? |
42759 | Has he a right to demand the full value of the service? |
42759 | Has it a strict right to them? |
42759 | Has the man with the life preserver a right to exact such a payment? |
42759 | Have we made the earth that we should determine the rights of those who after us shall tenant it in their turn? |
42759 | How can this equivalence be determined and ascertained? |
42759 | How can we deduct his pain- cost from or weigh it against his compensation? |
42759 | How can we justify the superior rewards of that scarcity which is not due to unusual costs of any sort, but merely to restricted opportunity? |
42759 | How can we know or measure the net benefit obtained by a man who shovels sand ten hours for a wage of two dollars? |
42759 | How can we know that the high, competition- eliminating prices are really extortionate? |
42759 | How could I have hitherto blundered on this point as I have? |
42759 | How is the additional sum to be denominated? |
42759 | How much more may any group of workers demand without exposing itself to the sin of extortion? |
42759 | How much more than a living wage is due to any or all of the various classes of labourers? |
42759 | How much would this change increase the present rate of land taxes, and decrease existing land values? |
42759 | How or where was this relatively objective value of goods to find concrete expression? |
42759 | How then were they to be justified? |
42759 | How was labour cost to be measured, and the different kinds of labour evaluated? |
42759 | How, then, shall we justify the individual receiver of interest? |
42759 | If all rent be due to the community by the title of social production, why does Henry George defend at such length the title of birthright? |
42759 | If rent- confiscation would benefit a large number of people, why not increase the number by confiscating interest? |
42759 | If so, is such a proceeding socially and morally desirable? |
42759 | If so, what is this principle or formula? |
42759 | If the land belong to the people, why in the name of morality and justice should the people pay its salable value for their own? |
42759 | If there is, does it rest on individual or on social grounds? |
42759 | In what proportions should it be distributed? |
42759 | Is his natural right valid against the acquired right of the private proprietor? |
42759 | Is it a valid partial rule? |
42759 | Is it just that the fruit of a man''s own labour should be possessed and enjoyed by any one else? |
42759 | Is it not breaking faith with these investors when it reduces charges to the basis of the actual investment? |
42759 | Is it not obliged to go further, and pay for the positive gains that many of the owners would have reaped in the absence of the law? |
42759 | Is it possible to justify such returns? |
42759 | Is the assumption correct? |
42759 | Is the man who is able and refuses to clothe the naked deserving of any other appellation? |
42759 | Is there a satisfactory justification of interest? |
42759 | Is there no way by which these wastes can be reduced? |
42759 | Is there such a right, and such an obligation? |
42759 | Is this obligation one of charity or one of justice? |
42759 | May a tenant ever retain a part of the rent which the free course of competition would yield to the landowner? |
42759 | May he withhold from the landowner a sufficient portion of the rent to cover the deficit in wages? |
42759 | May it take a larger share without violating justice? |
42759 | May not the burdens and disadvantages of interest be mitigated or minimised? |
42759 | May we take a further step, and assert that private landownership is a natural right of the individual? |
42759 | On what ethical principle can they be thus distributed? |
42759 | On what ground can any person claim or be awarded a larger share than his fellows? |
42759 | On what ground can the community, or any part of it, set up a claim in strict justice to the increased land values? |
42759 | On what ground is it contended that a worker has a right to a decent livelihood, as thus defined, rather than to a bare subsistence? |
42759 | On what moral ground may it be taken by the landowner? |
42759 | On what principles should the surplus be apportioned? |
42759 | Or is it to be understood as requiring that the surplus be divided among the three agents of production? |
42759 | Or, is rendered morally good owing to its effects upon social welfare? |
42759 | Should all or any of the benefits of industrial improvements go to the consumer? |
42759 | Should the surplus in question be discontinued by lowering prices, or should it be continued and distributed among the labourers? |
42759 | That is to say: is interest justified immediately and intrinsically by the relations existing between the owner and the user of capital? |
42759 | Was this treating the landlords justly? |
42759 | What are the objective reasons in favour of the capitalist''s claim to interest? |
42759 | What causes the rate to be five per cent., or six per cent., or any other per cent.? |
42759 | What does it imply specifically and in the concrete? |
42759 | What does value mean, and how is it to be determined? |
42759 | What is the measure of extortionate prices in this connection? |
42759 | What is the measure of proper valuation? |
42759 | What is the precise basis of his right? |
42759 | What persons, or group, or authority is charged with the obligation which corresponds to the right to a living wage? |
42759 | What reason is there to expect that men will act differently in the future? |
42759 | What would be the effect upon private land- incomes, and private land- wealth? |
42759 | When all the labourers in an industry are receiving the"equitable minimum,"have they a right to exact anything more at the expense of interest? |
42759 | When? |
42759 | Where are the profits, and who gets them? |
42759 | Who can say which of these calculations is correct, or whether either of them is correct? |
42759 | Who has authorised us to shut against these classes the doors of a more liberal standard of living, and a more ample measure of self development? |
42759 | Who or where is the business man in a joint stock company? |
42759 | Why do men assign these different ethical qualities to the production of value? |
42759 | Why has Jones a right to the shoes that he has made out of materials that he has bought? |
42759 | Why has the shoemaker a right to the value that he adds to the raw material in making a pair of shoes? |
42759 | Why is it wrong and unjust to kill or maim an innocent man? |
42759 | Why may not the task of abolition be performed by the State? |
42759 | Why not provide once for all that securities shall be issued only to represent what has been invested?... |
42759 | Why should not all persons be compensated equally? |
42759 | Why should not this theory find recognition in productive enterprises conducted by the co- operative stores? |
42759 | Why should the capitalist receive six per cent., rather than two per cent., or sixteen per cent.? |
42759 | Why should the capitalist, who is no more a worker than the landowner, be permitted to extract revenue from his possessions? |
42759 | Why should the locomotive engineer receive more than the trackman? |
42759 | Why then does not the rate of interest fall? |
42759 | Why, then, is it reasonable for the shoemaker to require, why has he a right to require payment for the utilities that he produces? |
42759 | Would capital still have value in a no- interest régime, and if so how would its value be determined? |
42759 | Would it not, however, be unjust to the landowners? |
42759 | Would its suppression be socially beneficial or socially detrimental? |
42759 | Would not this check to the increase of capital cause serious injury to society? |
42759 | Would such a restriction be a violation of the right of private ownership? |
42759 | Would the State be justified in abolishing rent and interest, and thus enabling labour to obtain the whole product? |
42759 | Would the measure in question inflict undue hardship upon individuals? |
42759 | [ 140]"What is Capital?" |
42759 | _ Conclusions from History_ What conclusions does history warrant concerning the social and moral value of private landownership? |
42759 | _ Interest on Productive Capital_ On what ground does the Church or Catholic theological opinion justify interest on invested capital? |
42759 | _ Limitation Through Progressive Taxation_ Is it legitimate and feasible to reduce great fortunes indirectly, through taxation? |
42759 | _ Methods of Preventing Monopolistic Injustice_ How shall the injustices of monopoly be prevented in the future? |
42759 | _ The Functions and Rewards of the Business Man_ Who is the business man, and what is the nature of his share of the product of industry? |
42759 | _ The Labourer''s Claim Upon the Rent_ Should any part of the rent go to the labourer? |
42759 | _ The Question of Distributing All_ Is a man obliged to distribute_ all_ his superfluous wealth? |
42759 | _ The Question of Minimum Profits_ Has the business man a strict right to a minimum living profit? |
42759 | _ The Rate of Interest_ Is there a single rate of interest throughout industry? |
42759 | _ The"Innocent"Investor_ Is the State obliged to protect, or is even justified in protecting, the innocent victims of stockwatering? |
42759 | a right so rigorous and exact that private appropriation of them is unjust? |
42759 | and how much more? |
42759 | of surplus gain be justified? |
42759 | of the superfluous incomes in the United States would suffice to alleviate all the existing grave and ordinary distress? |
42759 | on the capital of the merchant and the manufacturer? |
42759 | on the shares of the stockholders in corporations? |
38439 | ''Any cold one?'' 38439 ''Any hot joint?'' |
38439 | ''Can you broil me a fowl?'' 38439 ''Cold one, sir? |
38439 | ''Eggs and bacon, sir?'' 38439 ''Fowl, sir? |
38439 | And who might he be? |
38439 | And yer mother? 38439 But you have n''t an invitation, have you?" |
38439 | Can I get in for''little business,''and utility? |
38439 | Can you, sir, in any degree aid me with propriety? 38439 Could you give me a berth in the orchestra?" |
38439 | Do you know the owner? |
38439 | Do you think you can run a Frenchman through the body, sir? |
38439 | Hallo, guv''nor,said he;"what''s up?" |
38439 | Has anybody seen it? |
38439 | Have you got any money? |
38439 | How can I repay you? 38439 How can you put so preposterous a question? |
38439 | How could you do so? |
38439 | I did? |
38439 | I wish to say, have you ever thought of marriage? |
38439 | Impossible to get rid of them? |
38439 | Indeed,said Sheridan;"and what took you to Covent Garden?" |
38439 | Is there any chance for harlequin, and dancing? |
38439 | My friend,said the officer,"is it possible that you can read Horace in the original?" |
38439 | Scruples? |
38439 | Stay,said Hook,"do you see that house-- pretty villa, is n''t it? |
38439 | To be sure I am,said Kelly,"but what has Shakespeare to do with £ 3000 or the Italian singers?" |
38439 | Wat''s yer been a doin''on? 38439 What are these for?" |
38439 | What do you come here for, sir? |
38439 | What do you mean? |
38439 | What is it? |
38439 | What is to become of me? |
38439 | What security? |
38439 | What''s wrong, madam? 38439 Where are you going to?" |
38439 | Where do you come from? |
38439 | Where''s your father and mother? |
38439 | Why did n''t you get him to renew the bill? |
38439 | Why pay Jenkins? 38439 Why, how could that be; there was no one present but you and I?" |
38439 | Will you ask any demonstration of my veracity? 38439 You''ve come from a long way off, young un-- ain''t yer?" |
38439 | ''Had the picture been sold?'' |
38439 | ''How much?'' |
38439 | ''Prythee, Trueman, what became of these players when the stage was put down, and the rebellion raised?'' |
38439 | ''They stand me, sir, in more than that, and''tis for a bare subsistence I present or sell them; how shall I live?'' |
38439 | ''This is rather a piece of treachery; at whose suit?'' |
38439 | ''What do you want with me?'' |
38439 | ''What have you got in the house?'' |
38439 | ''Where, where?'' |
38439 | --Belmour, 9- 1/2_d._;''Young Widow''--Splash, 1_s._ 1- 1/2_d._ Tuesday:''Englishman in France; or, Why Did n''t I Kill Myself Yesterday?'' |
38439 | After inquiring what subject the youth was painting, and what branch of art his inclinations led him to adopt? |
38439 | After some conversation, the owner of the snuff- box said,"But may I ask you why you so resolutely refused to be searched?" |
38439 | Ai n''t she got no home neither?" |
38439 | Are you an admirer of Shakespeare?" |
38439 | Are you going back to the theatre? |
38439 | Barry said,''What are you about?'' |
38439 | Bland in''The Children of the Wood,''when we squeezed out our shillings apiece to sit three or four times in a season in the one shilling gallery? |
38439 | Bring your beggarly actors into this town to demoralize the people? |
38439 | Burritt?" |
38439 | But if these pictures are now drawn from artist life, what must that life have been fifty or a hundred years ago? |
38439 | Ca n''t she keep yer? |
38439 | Chantrey asked,"Did you see it made?" |
38439 | Could loftiest chivalry show greater heroism, nobler self- control, than this old man-- this weary breaker of flints? |
38439 | Deliciously truthful this, is it not? |
38439 | Do you remember our pleasant walks to Enfield, and Potter''s Bar, and Waltham, when we had a holiday? |
38439 | Do you think he has some very trifling sketch I could buy for that sum? |
38439 | Do_ you_ call this painting, Dalton? |
38439 | For was not Christ Himself Chancellor of the Order, and the Apostles Knight Companions?" |
38439 | Gallet was away, so the poet undertook to serve the lady, saying to her,"Is that all you want?" |
38439 | God forgive us, we are all sinners; and if we weep not for this man''s deficiency, how shall we ask tears when our day comes? |
38439 | Got a penny, or a post- office stamp? |
38439 | Have a glass of sherry? |
38439 | Have a glass of sherry? |
38439 | Have a glass of sherry?" |
38439 | Have you never thought of making an end of this?" |
38439 | Here is a cheque of Gribble and Co. on Lloyd''s for £ 25 10_s._""What''s the use of a cheque at this time of night?" |
38439 | His grey workhouse coat braver than purple and miniver? |
38439 | How can I ever hope to pay you the money back?" |
38439 | How could it have been? |
38439 | How long do you want it for? |
38439 | How long shall you be here?" |
38439 | How?" |
38439 | If respectability wanted to point a moral, is n''t there one here? |
38439 | If you ca n''t afford it, why do you give it? |
38439 | In Heaven''s name, what made the people talk of setting up a statue to Sir William Follet? |
38439 | Is it not the stony heart of the world''s injustice knocked at by poverty? |
38439 | Is not penury to him even as a robe of honour? |
38439 | It was true the materials for the dish were all there, but who was to make the delicacy? |
38439 | Looking at Coleridge, that officer said,--"What''s your name?" |
38439 | Not every leaf made out, hey?--not every blade of grass? |
38439 | On the earl calling out to his assemblage,"Are we all here?" |
38439 | Presently his, on this occasion, not over gracious Majesty peevishly inquired,"What does he ask for this daub?" |
38439 | Run away from home?" |
38439 | Said Piron:"I leave the care of that to la Camarde; but if you please, what do you mean?" |
38439 | Shall he not be of the Order of Poverty? |
38439 | Suppose we dine there?" |
38439 | The interrogatories put to him by the vintner were these,"What is God best pleased with? |
38439 | The offer was gladly accepted, and when the introduction had been managed Holcroft was asked by Macklin"what had put it into his head to turn actor?" |
38439 | The old general stepped forward and said,"Sir, do you mean to insult us because we have drunk your wine? |
38439 | The old man blushed, shook hands, and after conversing for a few minutes, asked them if they would remain to dinner, and partake of his hospitality? |
38439 | The same could not be said of Sheridan unfortunately, whose ingenuity under monetary pressure( and when was n''t he pressed for money?) |
38439 | The wine- merchant, much delighted, proposed running home for it, when Sheridan stopped him with"What do you say to dining with me to- day? |
38439 | Then my nephew''s fee, £ 1 1_s._, and my trouble, say £ 1, £ 42 10_s._ Here''s 15_s._, that''s £ 42 16_s._ Dick, have you got 4_s._?" |
38439 | Think of your Cathedral ground; who lies in it? |
38439 | To which he replied,"What is the use of a child? |
38439 | What does all this mean?" |
38439 | What else? |
38439 | What had he done? |
38439 | What is the Devil best pleased with? |
38439 | What is the World best pleased with? |
38439 | What punishment befell those who were unfortunate among them but that which follows reckless habits and careless lives? |
38439 | What return of gratitude, fame, affection, did it not bring to all? |
38439 | What shall I have to- day?" |
38439 | What shall he do with it? |
38439 | What was to be done? |
38439 | What''s your treasury hour?" |
38439 | When he had finished his breakfast he would say,"Are those doors all shut, John?" |
38439 | Who has insulted you?" |
38439 | Who would live the life of revelry that Sheridan lived to have such an end? |
38439 | Why not finish life at once? |
38439 | Why not pay me? |
38439 | Will you have the kindness to let me see his paces?" |
38439 | Will you hold forth? |
38439 | Wot''s the matter?" |
38439 | Would not Mrs. Sheridan like to have one like it? |
38439 | all this for a song?" |
38439 | and what am I best pleased with?" |
38439 | how d''ye do? |
38439 | if he had studied from the antique and from life? |
38439 | what''s your instrument?" |
38439 | whether he was instructed or self- taught? |
41405 | ''Does not this prove that capitalist production creates a surplus product for which there is no room on the internal market? |
41405 | ''How can the entire capitalist class accumulate money under such circumstances? |
41405 | ''Is n''t there a chance to make a little profit? |
41405 | ''Would saving be able to produce this stick?'' |
41405 | ''[ 173] If this is true, how can there be any accumulation of capital? |
41405 | ''[ 190] What would MacCulloch have to advise in view of such an agrarian crisis in Southern Europe? |
41405 | ''[ 393] Where could the ruined American farmer turn? |
41405 | ( 2) Q.: Where do the capitalists get the money for the realisation of capitalised surplus value? |
41405 | ( 3) Q.: How did the money come into the country in the first place? |
41405 | And of what does this surplus- product consist? |
41405 | And of what does this surplus- value consist? |
41405 | And who requires these additional means of production? |
41405 | And why? |
41405 | And why? |
41405 | Aside from this, where does the money come from? |
41405 | But could anyone increase his consumption as rapidly and indefinitely as the progress of labour productivity makes the surplus value increase? |
41405 | But does this diagram show a surplus product to come into being? |
41405 | But how large a family? |
41405 | But if this great public is essentially characterised as consuming the surplus value, whence does it obtain the means to buy? |
41405 | But if we ask:''What are these wages for the workers who have received them?'' |
41405 | But now the question arises: who is to get these indigestible items in the course of general distribution? |
41405 | But what about the consumption of society? |
41405 | But what is the position in real life? |
41405 | But what of the remaining surplus value, the part that is accumulated? |
41405 | But who can buy the products incorporating the other, the capitalised part of the surplus value? |
41405 | But who could have bought their surplus product? |
41405 | But who else could provide the demand for the commodities incorporating the capitalised surplus value? |
41405 | Can one actually talk of total social capital of society as an entity, and if so, what is the real meaning of this concept? |
41405 | Could it be that there is too much of one kind of produce and too little of another, as Say and Ricardo would have it? |
41405 | First and foremost where do the B''s get the cash to buy an additional product from the A''s? |
41405 | For whom can it be destined? |
41405 | Has it any real bearing on the problems of actual life? |
41405 | Has not England, by forgetting men for things, sacrificed the end to the means? |
41405 | Have they had any other effect than to make every class partake of care, privation and the danger of complete ruin? |
41405 | He exclaims:''Whose demand? |
41405 | Here we must ask first of all: what is the starting point of accumulation? |
41405 | How can it be assured that every one of these factors increases in the right proportion? |
41405 | How can it be possible under these circumstances to construct anything in the nature of a total capital of society? |
41405 | How can this take place, leaving cycles and crises out of consideration? |
41405 | How can we overcome this blatant contradiction? |
41405 | How could production-- so divided and yet so powerful-- conceivably estimate in good time what will be enough? |
41405 | How could the entrepreneurs of the world recognise the limits beyond which the market would cease to be healthy? |
41405 | How does he himself monetise this surplus- portion of his product? |
41405 | How does this affect the process of reproduction? |
41405 | How is it done? |
41405 | How then is it that capitalist expansion had not yet( in 1912) shown any sign of slackening? |
41405 | How will the material relations of reproduction be adjusted? |
41405 | How, in terms of capitalism, does society create out of its annual labour a_ greater_ amount of capital than it formerly possessed? |
41405 | How, then, could their labour power provide them with a living? |
41405 | I ask: Do the capitalists perhaps give away their products to foreigners for nothing, throw it into the sea, maybe? |
41405 | If Sismondi exclaims in the face of Ricardo''s doctrine:''What, is wealth to be all, and man a mere nothing? |
41405 | If accumulation does take place, demand will absorb output, as the model shows, but what is it that makes accumulation take place? |
41405 | If we ask a capitalist:''What are the wages you pay your workers?'' |
41405 | Is it explained just because we can put the mathematical proportions of accumulation on paper? |
41405 | May not this sum suffice to monetise the surplus- value? |
41405 | On this new conception[ of Mac''s] there is a surplus of products, an advantage from labour-- to whom will it accrue? |
41405 | Rodbertus is ready with this answer:''What were the workers to do after their emancipation other than to agree to these regulations? |
41405 | So the surplus product of Departments I and II must be bought-- by whom? |
41405 | The masters or the workers in town or country? |
41405 | The production of what products? |
41405 | The question is: How does he maintain his surplus- value, not, how does he divide the money later after he has secured it? |
41405 | The question still remains: Where does the money come from, which the various B''s( I) withdrew from the circulation and accumulated? |
41405 | This brings us back to the old question: How, and by whom, is the accumulated surplus value to be realised? |
41405 | Ultimately, the exorbitant interest had to be paid somehow, but how-- where were the means to come from? |
41405 | We should not ask, accordingly: Where does the money required for realising the surplus value come from? |
41405 | Well then, who requires these additional consumer goods? |
41405 | Were they simply to grab some of the capital existing in the society for their maintenance? |
41405 | What buyers, then, does he advance for this new luxury production? |
41405 | What does he think about, then? |
41405 | What does this mean? |
41405 | What had provided the capital for these enterprises? |
41405 | What happens to the products of Department II which are then left over? |
41405 | What has gone wrong? |
41405 | What is income, and what is capital? |
41405 | What is it precisely that constitutes this problem of the reproduction of total capital? |
41405 | What is the fruit of this immense accumulation of wealth? |
41405 | What is the nature of the total capital of a society? |
41405 | What kind of people are we thinking of when we speak of an increase in the population? |
41405 | What motive have the capitalists for enlarging their stock of real capital? |
41405 | What will become of the capitalised surplus value? |
41405 | What, then, could the workers have done? |
41405 | What, then, has thrown a spanner into the works, why the crisis? |
41405 | What, then, is this surplus value that it should interest the capitalist for its own sake? |
41405 | Whence the demand for the accumulated surplus value? |
41405 | Where can this additional labour be found? |
41405 | Where does II get the money for this? |
41405 | Where does the additional money come from, by which the additional surplus- value now contained in the form of commodities is to be realised? |
41405 | Where does the demand come from which keeps accumulation going? |
41405 | Where does the money for this purpose come from? |
41405 | Where is this continually increasing demand to come from, which in Marx''s diagram forms the basis of reproduction on an ever rising scale? |
41405 | Where, for instance, are the organisations, the up- to- date statistical bureaux and the like to help them in this task? |
41405 | Where, then, could we find this new capital which may perhaps be much more considerable than that required by agriculture?... |
41405 | Where, then, does the accumulation of wealth make itself felt as a public benefit? |
41405 | Where, then, does the additional money come from?--the £ 100 the capitalists need to realise their own surplus value? |
41405 | Who will buy the commodities in which it is hidden? |
41405 | Who, then, realises the permanently increasing surplus value? |
41405 | Whose satisfaction? |
41405 | Why is this? |
41405 | Why, come to that, does England require an external market? |
41405 | Why? |
41405 | Will the others be able to keep it from them? |
41405 | Will what they want be the grave of modern civilisation? |
41405 | With what object? |
41405 | Yet Bulgakov overlooks the principal problem: who exactly is to profit by an expansion such as that whose mechanism he examines? |
41405 | Yet would it not be very easy to make good this loss in means of production which results from our example? |
41405 | [ 294] But then, is it not beyond any doubt that some such''third persons''exist in every capitalist society? |
41405 | [ 90] Two questions now arise:( 1) by whom should the money be owned, and( 2) how much of it should there be? |
41405 | _ Suum cuique_--had this not been the motto of Rodbertus? |
41405 | accumulate, for whose sake do they produce? |
41405 | and what does he want to exchange his hops for? |
41405 | but: Where are the consumers for this surplus value? |
41405 | can we trace income, wholly or in part, back to the stick as its_ cause_, may we consider it, wholly or in parts, as a_ product_ of the stick? |
41405 | into it? |
41405 | into it? |
41405 | not consumption but capitalisation of part of the surplus value? |
41405 | or, as Marx would have it: Whence the money to pay for the accumulated surplus value? |
41405 | the workers as wages, or the capitalists as profits of enterprise? |
41405 | to expand production, instead of squandering it altogether? |
36541 | But who wantonly destroys it? |
36541 | Et quel est, s''il vous plaà ® t, cet audacieux animal qui se permet d''être bâti au dedans comme une jolie petite fille? |
36541 | Maintain him, how? |
36541 | Nay, but I choose my physician and(?) 36541 Who gave your son these dispositions?" |
36541 | Why could he not plaster the chinks? |
36541 | [ 26][ 25] Which? 36541 [ Greek: hà ´ Dêmidion, horas ta lagà ´''ha soi pherà ´]?" |
36541 | --but,"what will it do during reproduction?" |
36541 | 2. Who are the Claimants of the store( that is to say, the holders of the currency), and in what proportions? |
36541 | 4)? |
36541 | A certain quantity of able hands and heads being placed at our disposal, what shall we most advisably set them upon? |
36541 | A fine prosperous business that would be, would it not? |
36541 | Admitting that our stars are to be thanked for our safety, whom are we to thank for the danger? |
36541 | Admitting the crosier and emeralds to be useful articles, is the body to be considered as"having"them? |
36541 | And do not you see what a pretty and pleasant come- off there is for most of us, in this spiritual application? |
36541 | And the true home question, to every capitalist and to every nation, is not,"how many ploughs have you?" |
36541 | And what distinction separates them? |
36541 | Are a successful national speculation and a pestilence, economically the same thing?" |
36541 | As, first, to what length of life? |
36541 | But I very seriously inquire why ironware is produce, and silverware is not? |
36541 | But far more than all this, is it a question not of clothes or weapons, but of men? |
36541 | But how will he apply this labour? |
36541 | But is the nobleness consistent with the number? |
36541 | But to what end? |
36541 | But what can be done for them? |
36541 | But what will be its value a hundred years hence? |
36541 | But you do n''t suppose that_ that''s_ goldsmith''s work? |
36541 | But, how of bayonets? |
36541 | Buy in the cheapest market?--yes; but what made your market cheap? |
36541 | Can it be Liberality then? |
36541 | Can you guess what? |
36541 | Can you guess which it is likely to be? |
36541 | Carlyle?) |
36541 | Christ,--no cure, No help for women, sobbing out of sight Because men made the laws? |
36541 | DID''ST NOT THOU AGREE WITH ME FOR A PENNY? |
36541 | Do they, in the politico- economical sense of property, belong to it? |
36541 | Do you mean that the laws of all civilized nations are perfect? |
36541 | Do you suppose any workman worthy the name will put his brains into a cup or an urn, which he knows is to go to the melting pot in half a score years? |
36541 | Do you suppose it is in the long run good for Manchester, or good for England, that the Continent should be in the state it is? |
36541 | Does he consider occupation itself to be an expensive luxury, difficult of attainment, of which too little is to be found in the world? |
36541 | Essential to what degree, Mr. Ricardo? |
36541 | For what noble work was there ever any audible''demand''in that poor sense?" |
36541 | Has he them by inheritance or by education? |
36541 | Has the nation hitherto worked for and gathered the right thing or the wrong? |
36541 | Hast thou found No remedy, my England, for such woes? |
36541 | Have n''t we built a perfectly beautiful gallery for all the pictures we have to take care of?" |
36541 | Have you nothing best, Which generous souls may perfect and present, And He shall thank the givers for? |
36541 | I can not stay now to dispute that, though I would willingly; but do you think it is_ still_ necessary for that development? |
36541 | If the woodman''s axe is productive, is the executioner''s? |
36541 | If you were to embank Lincolnshire now,--more stoutly against the sea? |
36541 | In this definition, is the word"just,"or"legal,"finally to stand? |
36541 | Is it a question of classical dress-- what a tunic was like, or a chlamys, or a peplus? |
36541 | Is it employment that we want to find, or support during employment? |
36541 | Is it idleness we wish to put an end to, or hunger? |
36541 | Is n''t your shilling''s worth the best bargain? |
36541 | Is your courage spent In handwork only? |
36541 | Nature asks of him calmly and inevitably, What have you found, or formed-- the right thing or the wrong? |
36541 | No cure for wicked children? |
36541 | No hope for Rome, free France, chivalric France? |
36541 | No mercy for the slave, America? |
36541 | No outlet, Austria, for the scourged and bound, No call back for the exiled? |
36541 | No pity, O world, no tender utterance Of benediction, and prayers stretched this way For poor Italia, baffled by mischance? |
36541 | Now I do not ask, though, had I written this paragraph, it would surely have been asked of me, What is to become of the silversmiths? |
36541 | Now, as he was sinking-- had he the gold? |
36541 | Or does the mode of distribution in any wise affect the nature of the riches? |
36541 | Or if one or two slave- masters be rich, and the nation be otherwise composed of slaves, is it to be called a rich nation? |
36541 | Or is the soul so much less trustworthy in its instincts than the stomach, that legislation is necessary for the one, but inconvenient to the other? |
36541 | Or, waiving this, is it not indisputable that the claim of the State to the allegiance, involves the protection of the subject? |
36541 | Perfect!--these, with dim eyes and cramped limbs, and slowly wakening minds? |
36541 | Pure!--these, with sensual desire and grovelling thought; foul of body, and coarse of soul?" |
36541 | Quà ® discrepat istis, Qui nummos aurumque recondit, nescius uti Compositis, metuensque velut contingere sacrum? |
36541 | Sell in the dearest?--yes, truly; but what made your market dear? |
36541 | Shall nothing more be asked of us than that we be honest?" |
36541 | Shall we read them? |
36541 | So that the first question of a good art- economist respecting any work is, Will it lose its flavour by keeping? |
36541 | Suppose it should turn out, finally, that a true government set to true work, instead of being a costly engine, was a paying one? |
36541 | Suppose, instead of this volunteer marching and countermarching, you were to do a little volunteer ploughing and counterploughing? |
36541 | That you might tread upon them, and starve them, and get the better of them in every possible way? |
36541 | The Merchant-- What is_ his_"due occasion"of death? |
36541 | The eliciting of the true definition will give us the reply to our first question,"What is value?" |
36541 | The first question, then, which we have to put under our simple conception of central Government, namely,"What store has it?" |
36541 | The second inquiry, into two: 1. Who are the Holders of the store, and in what proportions? |
36541 | Thus, if the king alone be rich-- suppose Croesus or Mausolus-- are the Lydians and Carians therefore a rich nation? |
36541 | True; but why not also,"feelings of an agreeable kind?" |
36541 | Twenty people can gain money for one who can use it; and the vital question, for individual and for nation, is, never"how much do they make?" |
36541 | We give the crown"ob civem servatum,"--why not"ob civem natum"? |
36541 | Well, supposing them sculptors, will not the same rule hold? |
36541 | Well, then, supposing we wish to employ it, how is it to be best discovered and refined? |
36541 | Well, who made him more persevering or more sagacious than others? |
36541 | Whale? |
36541 | What can he do, but go and lay it on his mother''s grave? |
36541 | What do you suppose fools were made for? |
36541 | What end can there be for them at last, but to consume one another? |
36541 | What is it to him, if the angels of Assisi fade from its vaults, or the queens and kings of Chartres fall from their pedestals? |
36541 | What is its quantity in relation to the currency? |
36541 | What is its quantity in relation to the population? |
36541 | What is the exact degree of goodness which is"essential"to its exchangeable value, but not"the measure"of it? |
36541 | What is the meaning of"useful?" |
36541 | What is the nature of the store? |
36541 | What is the nature of the store? |
36541 | What is the quantity of the store in relation to the Currency? |
36541 | What is the quantity of the store in relation to the population? |
36541 | What melody does Tityrus meditate on his tenderly spiral pipe? |
36541 | What shall he do with it? |
36541 | What should we do with houses in Verona?" |
36541 | What substance will it furnish, good for life? |
36541 | What will the positions of the two men be when the invalid is able to resume work? |
36541 | Where is the product of that work? |
36541 | Which of these is their natural state, and to which of them belongs the natural rate of wages? |
36541 | Who can clothe-- who teach-- who restrain their multitudes? |
36541 | Who gave him this will? |
36541 | Why are your carriages nicely painted and finished outside? |
36541 | Why are your exteriors of houses so well finished, your furniture so polished and costly, but for other people to see? |
36541 | Why is one man richer than another? |
36541 | Why not, at last, ourselves? |
36541 | Why not? |
36541 | Why speak of these lower services? |
36541 | Will you have Paul Veronese to paint your ceiling, or the plumber from over the way? |
36541 | Would you not at once assert of such a mistress that she knew nothing of her duties? |
36541 | Would you not say that the prudent and kind young lady was, on the whole, answerable for the additional touches of claw on the Vandykes? |
36541 | You will( I hope) finally ask me what is the outcome of all this, practicable, to- morrow morning by us who are sitting here? |
36541 | _ R._--Or that they are perfect at least in their discrimination of what crimes they should deal with, and what crimes they should let alone? |
36541 | _ R._--What_ do_ you mean, then? |
36541 | but what has been doing in the time of the transfer? |
36541 | but"to what purpose do they spend?" |
36541 | but,"where are your furrows?" |
36541 | holy; without any long robes nor anointing oils; these rough- jacketed, rough- worded persons set to nameless and dishonoured service? |
36541 | is one of equal importance, whatever may be the constitution of the State; while the second question-- namely,"Who are the holders of the store?" |
36541 | no brothel- lure Burnt out by popular lightnings? |
36541 | no light Of teaching, liberal nations, for the poor, Who sit in darkness when it is not night? |
36541 | no repose, Russia, for knouted Poles worked underground, And gentle ladies bleached among the snows? |
36541 | not--"how quickly will this capital reproduce itself?" |
36541 | or had the gold him? |
36541 | or strip the peat of Solway, or plant Plinlimmon moors with larch-- then, in due hour of year, some amateur reaping and threshing? |
36541 | or whitebait? |
36541 | the reader, perhaps, answers amazedly:"pay good and bad workmen alike?" |
36541 | what work construct, protective of life? |
36541 | you will say,"are we not to produce any new art, nor take care of our parish churches?" |
36541 | you will say,"when do we do such things? |
12920 | And the girls? |
12920 | Anna,I said as tenderly as I could,"suppose I_ did_ give it all up?" |
12920 | Are n''t you coming down for some bridge? |
12920 | Are you Mr.----, the big swell who gives all the dinners and dances? |
12920 | Are you crazy? |
12920 | But why are n''t you going to have a clergyman marry you? |
12920 | By the way, Hastings,I said casually as I went by his desk,"where are you living now?" |
12920 | CHARITY:_ And did you pray to God that He would bless your counsel to them_? 12920 CHARITY:_ And why did you not bring them along with you_?" |
12920 | CHARITY:_ But what could they say for themselves, why they come not_? 12920 Ca n''t I bring you something?" |
12920 | Carmen? |
12920 | Do you grapevine? |
12920 | Er-- going to be in this afternoon? |
12920 | Ever played in hard luck? |
12920 | Fish walk? |
12920 | Going far? |
12920 | Hastings,I said,"do you mind telling me how much it costs you to live like this?" |
12920 | Have you lost money? |
12920 | How do you mean? |
12920 | How far is it to Pleasantdale? |
12920 | How is the Chicopee& Shamrock reorganization coming on? |
12920 | I suppose there are evening trains? |
12920 | I? 12920 Is n''t it wonderful to- day? |
12920 | It''s good to see you, all right-- but why make so much damned fuss about it? |
12920 | Of course you''ll stay to supper? |
12920 | Suppose she does n''t marry though? 12920 What are you asking old Washburn for?" |
12920 | What are you going to make of him? |
12920 | What are you laughing at? |
12920 | What ca n''t go on? |
12920 | What did you mean by that? 12920 What have you got there?" |
12920 | What have you got? |
12920 | What shall we do? |
12920 | What ward? |
12920 | What''s Sylvia going to do? |
12920 | What''s the matter? |
12920 | Where''s Tom? |
12920 | Who shall I say wants to talk? |
12920 | Why must I go to parties? |
12920 | Why not? |
12920 | Why? |
12920 | Would n''t you like your daughter to marry? |
12920 | Ye''ll be after taking my darlin''s away from me? |
12920 | You like the woods? |
12920 | _ Hast thou a Wife and Children_? 12920 _ Then said Charity to Christian: Have you a family? |
12920 | A couple of hundred dollars? |
12920 | A curious thought, is it not? |
12920 | After all, why not take the real thing, such as it is, instead of an imitation? |
12920 | And how far was I typical of a class? |
12920 | And if I am ridiculous, what of her and the other women of her age who, for some unknown reason, fatuously suppose they can renew their lost youth? |
12920 | And shall we say ten dates in American history? |
12920 | And the girls-- why, what do you think would happen to them if you suddenly gave up your place in society? |
12920 | And then-- let me see-- what would I do? |
12920 | And what were we, the crowning achievement of American civilization, like? |
12920 | And what would I surrender? |
12920 | And where do I come in? |
12920 | And who can prophesy the cost of the annual spring jaunt to Europe? |
12920 | And why has he spent this sum of money? |
12920 | Are you a married man_?" |
12920 | Ashamed of it? |
12920 | Better a year of Europe than a cycle of-- shall we say, Narragansett? |
12920 | Brotherly love? |
12920 | But at what cost? |
12920 | But has whatever feeling of obligation I may possess been evidenced in my conduct toward my fellows? |
12920 | But have I ever fully considered that he died for me? |
12920 | But is this"me"limited to my body and my clothes? |
12920 | But suppose the child were a nephew? |
12920 | But what if you were given_ another_ chance to save a life for five hundred dollars? |
12920 | But why should I seek to copy them? |
12920 | Could it be accomplished? |
12920 | Did not my wife scheme and plot for years before she managed to get our names on the sacred list of invitations? |
12920 | Do n''t you feel the same way-- somehow?" |
12920 | Do we honor most the men who truly serve their generation and their country? |
12920 | Do you know any rich woman who would sacrifice her automobile in order to send convalescents to the country? |
12920 | Dress? |
12920 | Farm? |
12920 | Five hundred dollars? |
12920 | For what is its_ raison d''être_? |
12920 | Frankly, would you have parted with five hundred dollars to save that woman''s life? |
12920 | Given away? |
12920 | Had anything happened except that the scenery had gone by? |
12920 | Had it profited anything to me or anybody else? |
12920 | Has not his family the money? |
12920 | Have I been loyal to him? |
12920 | Have I ever even inconvenienced myself for others in any way? |
12920 | Have I ever repaid this debt? |
12920 | Have I in turn advanced the flag that they and hundreds of thousands of others, equally unselfish, carried forward? |
12920 | Have they changed for better or for worse? |
12920 | Have you been entertained? |
12920 | Have you enjoyed yourself? |
12920 | Have you profited? |
12920 | Hence the college boy who has kept straight for eight months in the year is apt to wonder: What is the use? |
12920 | Here was Hastings, jolly as a clam and living like a prince on-- what? |
12920 | How about a mere social acquaintance? |
12920 | How about moral and intellectual suicide? |
12920 | How are you feeling?" |
12920 | How do you know he really has consumption? |
12920 | How does that come out?" |
12920 | How is this possible? |
12920 | How much definite historical information have we, even about matters of genuine importance? |
12920 | Hunt? |
12920 | I drink a cup of coffee or a cocktail: after they are consumed they are part of me; are they not part of me as I hold the cup or the glass in my hand? |
12920 | I put to myself the question:_ Were_ they worth striving for? |
12920 | I wonder if you would n''t like Jim to show you round our place?" |
12920 | I-- successful? |
12920 | Is he a_ good_ boy? |
12920 | Is it for this we labor and worry-- that we scheme and conspire-- that we debase ourselves and lose our self- respect? |
12920 | Is it other than that expressed by my wife on the occasion when our youngest daughter rebelled at having to go to a children''s party? |
12920 | Is my coat more characteristic of me than my house-- my sleeve- links than my wife or my collie dog? |
12920 | Is not my hostess''hoarse, good- natured, rather vulgar voice the clarion of society? |
12920 | Is there any sensible reason why one''s daughter should be encouraged to imitate the dances of the Apache and the negro debauchee? |
12920 | Is there no wine good enough for my host? |
12920 | Is there not some charitable organization that does such things? |
12920 | It looks easy, does it not? |
12920 | Let me take this, will you?" |
12920 | Now why try to talk about Bergson''s theories if you have not the most elementary knowledge of philosophy or metaphysics? |
12920 | Now"I put it to you,"as they say in the English law courts, how much of a personal sacrifice would you have made to prevent this tragedy? |
12920 | Old? |
12920 | Old? |
12920 | On the other hand, how are your children coming on?" |
12920 | Or do we fawn, rather, on those who merely serve themselves? |
12920 | Or have I been content for all these years to reap where I have not sown? |
12920 | Or:"Why do n''t you ask the Peyton- Smiths? |
12920 | Outside of the really poor, is there such a thing as genuine charity among us? |
12920 | Poor old Jane? |
12920 | Read? |
12920 | Shall I help you off with your things?" |
12920 | Shall he pauperize himself just for a cousin? |
12920 | Should I wish my own girls to marry a youth like him? |
12920 | Should a young man be blamed for getting on by the easiest way he can? |
12920 | Succeeded in what? |
12920 | That''s three hundred, is n''t it? |
12920 | The question is: How far have Johnson''s two millions made him a charitable man? |
12920 | Their world is all cakes and ale-- why should they bother as to whether the pothouse beer is bad? |
12920 | Then why blame the individuals? |
12920 | They are setting an example of mere industry, perhaps-- but to what end? |
12920 | They can look through, sort of dimly; but they ca n''t get out?" |
12920 | This cooped- up city life is pretty narrowing, do n''t you think?" |
12920 | To accept, as a matter of course and as my due, the benefits others gave years of labor to secure for me? |
12920 | To produce me? |
12920 | To the German schoolboy, George Washington is almost as familiar a character as Columbus; but how many American children know anything of Bismarck? |
12920 | To what end did they do these things? |
12920 | To what end? |
12920 | Was I not an old man, perhaps, regardless of my youthful face? |
12920 | Was it before or after Christ? |
12920 | Was not this an attitude of age? |
12920 | Was the race profiting me anything? |
12920 | We assume that these men are useful because they are busy; but in what does their usefulness consist? |
12920 | Well, I wanted to be fair and even things up; but, honestly, can you answer correctly five out of these twenty elementary questions? |
12920 | Well, how much would you have done to preserve her life or keep her soul out of hell? |
12920 | What am I-- what have I ever done, now that I come to think of it, to deserve those sacrifices? |
12920 | What are the achievements that win our applause, for which we bestow our decorations in America? |
12920 | What are they busy about? |
12920 | What are they? |
12920 | What are you going to do? |
12920 | What did I have that he had not? |
12920 | What did he mean? |
12920 | What did he mean? |
12920 | What do you say?" |
12920 | What goal or goals had I attained? |
12920 | What have you been working for all these years? |
12920 | What is it now? |
12920 | What shall we do for food?'' |
12920 | What sort of an opinion could this honest fellow, my mere employee-- dependent on my favor for his very bread-- have of me, his master? |
12920 | What was the use even of trying? |
12920 | What would I be getting for my money-- even then? |
12920 | What would I have to drink? |
12920 | What would I receive as a_ quid pro quo_ for my thirty thousand dollars? |
12920 | What would be the result should I stop and go with the scenery? |
12920 | What would become of me if I did not look out for my own interests in the same way my associates look out for theirs? |
12920 | What would he say could he see my valet, my butler, my French cook? |
12920 | What would that little East Side Jewess''life have been worth to you? |
12920 | What, then, am I-- who, the Scriptures assert, am made in the image of God? |
12920 | Where is that old brier pipe I keep to go a- fishing? |
12920 | Where is that old smoking- jacket of mine? |
12920 | Who and what is this being that has gradually been evolved during fifty years of life and which I call Myself? |
12920 | Why are_ we_ not more to_ them_? |
12920 | Why do n''t you study law and make some money? |
12920 | Why? |
12920 | Why? |
12920 | Why? |
12920 | Will God let such arrogance be without a blast of fire from heaven? |
12920 | Without them, undoubtedly I should be miserable; but with them-- with reputation, money, comfort, affection-- was I really happy? |
12920 | Would he admire and appreciate my paintings, my_ objets d''art,_ my rugs and tapestries, my rare old furniture? |
12920 | Would he be proud or otherwise--_is_ he proud or otherwise of me, his son? |
12920 | Would n''t you like to make big money?" |
12920 | Yes, what would I choose if I could do anything in the world for the next three hours? |
41936 | How much did the horse cost? |
41936 | ( 1) What is human Government? |
41936 | ( c)_ What is Value?_ Plainly it is the result of a comparison instituted between two things, using the word,"things,"here in its broadest sense. |
41936 | 12. Who pays the INDIRECT TAXES? |
41936 | And are the activities of men everywhere greatly and increasingly occupied with just those things, with which this science has exclusively to do? |
41936 | And what is the influence on the Wages of those whose services are now in lessened Desire along the whole line? |
41936 | And what is the remedy for them? |
41936 | And what is the universal Law of it? |
41936 | And where shall we find the terms for an immutable definition of it? |
41936 | And who is competent to announce the result of it in Value? |
41936 | And who would have to pay the taxes needful for the support of the new_ economical_ bureaus? |
41936 | Any_ tendency_ in the one to bring the other? |
41936 | Are CREDITS a legitimate subject of Taxation? |
41936 | Are these facts easily separable in the mind and in reality from other kinds of facts perhaps liable to be confounded with them? |
41936 | Are they facts of vast importance to the welfare of mankind? |
41936 | Because one thing_ follows_ another in point of time, is that any proof that the second is the_ result_ of the other in point of cause? |
41936 | But are borrowers, as a class, any more deserving of the fostering care of government than are lenders? |
41936 | But can not Congress do something to help rebuild the ruined city? |
41936 | But who institutes the comparison? |
41936 | But why have I before me three possible classes of renderers? |
41936 | Can anybody give a solid reason why they ought not to be so taxed? |
41936 | Can it take the place of money entirely? |
41936 | Can not these limits be overpassed in either direction? |
41936 | Commerce by individuals creates great wealth; why should not the organized commerce of a State make everybody rich? |
41936 | Could this profitable trade be easily increased? |
41936 | Demand increasing, Supply remaining as before, market- rate rises: how far can it rise from this cause? |
41936 | Did this astute objector ever hear of"domestic combination"to keep prices up to the highest possible point? |
41936 | Do we fully understand, from the foregoing descriptions and distinctions, the_ Nature_ of Credit? |
41936 | Does an alleged truth fall in with and fill out well some other demonstrated and accepted proposition, or a number of such other propositions? |
41936 | Does that destroy the motive and the gain of an exchange between the countries in these two articles? |
41936 | Does the former already sell to the latter and through the latter more goods than to all the world besides? |
41936 | Does this look like becoming"_ independent_"of the rest of the world in the matter of woollen clothing for our great People? |
41936 | Has Political Economy anything to say about the RATE of taxes per unit of that which is subject to tax? |
41936 | Have not American protectionists shut out French and German products 100:1 under the same plea now used on the Continent? |
41936 | Have we now compassed our first object? |
41936 | Here and now we are dealing with the simpler concrete question, What is the value of any specific valuable thing? |
41936 | Here the vexed question arises, how far has one generation_ the right_ to throw upon succeeding ones the burdens of a National Debt? |
41936 | How can she sell so much of her own stuff? |
41936 | How do new improvements in machinery and other enhanced facilities of Production in one country affect its foreign trade? |
41936 | How does it read? |
41936 | How does the Diversity of relative Advantage practically work in foreign trade? |
41936 | How does the varying play of International Demand affect the value of articles in foreign trade? |
41936 | How far can this simple action go? |
41936 | How is the whole class of Labor- takers affected by prohibitory tariff- taxes? |
41936 | How long and for what pay do you want to do it? |
41936 | How many loaves shall he give for each? |
41936 | How much Rent shall the tenant pay to the landlord for the present use of the latter''s old lands? |
41936 | How much above? |
41936 | How much did it cost to get ready for grazing the broad pastures? |
41936 | How much does she sell_ per capita_ of her people? |
41936 | How much must he charge for his goods in order to make himself whole? |
41936 | How would any level- headed man, capable of seeing beyond the point of his nose, have prognosticated in the premises? |
41936 | How? |
41936 | If protectionist taxes made the manufacturers rich, why should they not also enrich the rural herdsmen? |
41936 | If the legal rate be six, and the actual worth be eight, who lends at six? |
41936 | If the question be, How much is it worth? |
41936 | If the transfer took place, what was it that was sold? |
41936 | If this were a matter of genuine taxation, ought there not to have been an_ excise_ on the domestic corresponding to the_ impost_ on the foreign? |
41936 | In behalf of what sort of industries are these taxes ostensibly and plausibly levied? |
41936 | In short, why may not such taxes make everybody rich? |
41936 | In what PROPORTION ought the individual citizens to contribute to the fund annually necessary to be raised by Taxation? |
41936 | In what cases may a Government properly step in to regulate or prohibit the buying and selling of its citizens? |
41936 | In what does she pay? |
41936 | Is Great Britain willing to take in goods from the United States? |
41936 | Is capital abundant in England in bulk, and are its loanable rates low? |
41936 | Is it a good thing for the United States, that Great Britain takes in her goods freely? |
41936 | Is it any wonder that unfulfilled promises to pay invariably become less valuable than_ that_ which they promise to pay? |
41936 | Is it the commercial salvation of the United States that Britain is immovably for free trade with her and the rest of the world? |
41936 | Is not sauce for the goose sauce for the gander also? |
41936 | Is she ever flooded with cheap goods? |
41936 | Is speculation proper? |
41936 | Is that market ever slack on the whole? |
41936 | Is the United States willing to take in British goods in pay for her own goods exported thither? |
41936 | Is the principle of"International Copyright,"so- called, correct? |
41936 | Is there a Science by itself, clear and certain, that covers and controls Valuables?_ Here we must go slowly, if we would go surely. |
41936 | Is there anything substantive and continuous in its_ personnel_ and purposes, as there is in the government of God? |
41936 | Is this free trade profitable to Great Britain? |
41936 | Now, cogitates A, what kind of goods from B had we better restrict or prohibit? |
41936 | Now, what can limit the universal market for material products? |
41936 | Now, what is the necessary effect of Protectionism upon the general Demand for Laborers? |
41936 | Of what use is it to go out free and come back manacled? |
41936 | On what industries do the protectionist taxes fall at first to weaken and discourage them? |
41936 | Or can deny to him or them the_ results_ of such efforts, however embodied? |
41936 | Shall I shave myself or go to the barber? |
41936 | Should there be any EXEMPTIONS from Taxation? |
41936 | Suppose the said nation to succeed, what then? |
41936 | The lighter the old coins became, the scarcer became the new ones; for who would pay two ounces of silver when one ounce was legal tender? |
41936 | The preliminary questions are: What sort of facts has Political Economy to deal with, to inquire into, to classify, to make a science of? |
41936 | The question, Can Congress make such notes a legal tender for contracts made_ after_ the passage of the Act? |
41936 | This is not merely the only possible answer to the question,_ What is Value?_ but it is also a perfectly complete and satisfactory answer. |
41936 | To illustrate, How many ships does a commercial nation need to employ? |
41936 | To make accessible the forests that yield the timber? |
41936 | To open up the mines also and bring them into"touch"with the population? |
41936 | To sell surplus stocks abroad for what can be gotten for them, in order to make prices at home up to the usual scarcity point? |
41936 | To shut down mills and factories, to avoid depressing prices? |
41936 | Well, when? |
41936 | What about the immediate future? |
41936 | What ails our manufactures, that we can not sell them abroad? |
41936 | What are the bearings of the UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION on the whole matter of Taxation in this country? |
41936 | What are the causes deciding the exportable articles of any nation, and their order of precedence in Export? |
41936 | What are the economical reasons for an EXCISE or INTERNAL- TAX in connection with Tariff- taxes for revenue? |
41936 | What are the invariable conditions that precede, accompany, and follow, any and every act of Trade? |
41936 | What are the limits to her capacity to sell her own goods to foreigners? |
41936 | What did it cost"_ to subdue_"the present tillable lands of this country? |
41936 | What harm would ensue? |
41936 | What impulse, pray, on the earth or under the earth, can serve to depress them on the whole average_ below_ that point? |
41936 | What industry would decline? |
41936 | What is a Dollar- Bill? |
41936 | What is a Science? |
41936 | What is a limited market? |
41936 | What is a market? |
41936 | What is an illimitable market? |
41936 | What is her market? |
41936 | What is it but the old confusion between_ names_ and_ things_? |
41936 | What is it that binds all these persons together? |
41936 | What is that but judicial blindness as to the_ nature_ of Credit? |
41936 | What is that, but the monstrous incongruity that_ a promise_ is the same thing legally as its_ fulfilment_? |
41936 | What is the SOURCE out of which Taxes are actually paid? |
41936 | What is the difference between DIRECT and INDIRECT Taxes? |
41936 | What is the difference between SPECIFIC and ADVALOREM Taxes, and why should the student take careful note of these both singly and combined? |
41936 | What is the economical relation? |
41936 | What is the fundamental GROUND of Taxes? |
41936 | What is the matter? |
41936 | What is the precise change, then, in the valuable chosen as Money when it becomes money? |
41936 | What is the source of this vast volume of Capital? |
41936 | What is the truth about raw materials in this country? |
41936 | What is the_ principle_, under which these things have been done, are now being done, and are certain to be done in the time to come? |
41936 | What is to be said about the DIFFUSION of Taxes? |
41936 | What kind of goods shall we prohibit from B? |
41936 | What of it? |
41936 | What stimulus to work and save and grow rich would be weakened thereby? |
41936 | What was it that was paid for by the party of the second part? |
41936 | What was the Value of King Hiram''s cedar- timbers? |
41936 | What was the Value of the oil and wheat sent northward by King Solomon? |
41936 | What was the matter with these dollars? |
41936 | What, accordingly, is the bottom characteristic of Money? |
41936 | What, then, are the onerous elements that enter into the value of land- parcels and constitute their Cost of Production? |
41936 | What, then, are the ultimate elements of Buying and Selling? |
41936 | What, then, is Market- Value returned in the terms of Money? |
41936 | What, then, is the BOTTOM- PRINCIPLE in the Mode of Taxation? |
41936 | When valueless lands are made valuable by human efforts expended to that end, does not the"value"belong to those who made it? |
41936 | Whence are these immense profits to come? |
41936 | Where come in the solitary gifts, that may later be connected with Valuables, on the round earth as God fashioned it? |
41936 | Where even are the unique cases of God- given talent or genius in men themselves, such as may become connected with Valuables of the second class? |
41936 | Where lies in the technical sense the"balance of trade"between Great Britain and the rest of the world? |
41936 | Where was the famous and fallacious"balance of trade"in that case? |
41936 | Which is the superior party? |
41936 | Which must look out for the interest of the other beyond the terms implied in the trade itself? |
41936 | Which party in foreign trade pays the Costs of Carriage, or do each pay them in equal proportion? |
41936 | Which should take off his hat, the other remaining covered? |
41936 | Whither has it carried up her ocean- marine? |
41936 | Who buys these bills when exposed for sale in New York? |
41936 | Who can tell? |
41936 | Who ever heard of even one man, who was in possession of all the products of all kinds, that he wanted? |
41936 | Who is sufficient for these things? |
41936 | Who pays the taxes needful for the support of the present_ political_ bureaus? |
41936 | Who wants them? |
41936 | Who would be impoverished? |
41936 | Why not, then, inquires our nationalist innovator, organize new bureaus to undertake in their behalf the buying and selling of the people? |
41936 | Why should more than half the wool needed to clothe the people be taxed in such a way as to double( in general) the cost of the people''s clothing? |
41936 | Why should not the government have the proceeds of the last as well as of the first? |
41936 | Why should there be a resort to force to settle an industrial dispute any more than to settle any other private dispute? |
41936 | Why was lumber excepted? |
41936 | Why? |
41936 | Will such a resort be long tolerated by public opinion in civilized countries? |
41936 | Within what exact field do its investigations lie? |
41936 | Would not wages, and profits, and rents, all be lifted thereby, with no damage to anybody? |
41936 | Would our protectionists like it? |
41936 | Would the United States like it to be commercially treated by Britain exactly as the former treats the latter? |
41936 | _ But where is the"Value,"of which we have been in search?_ The answer is easy and certain and unevadible. |
41936 | _ What is a Dollar?_ A dollar is 25- 4/5 grains of a metal compound coined, of which nine parts are pure gold and one part a hardening alloy. |
41856 | ( 2) 50 per cent? |
41856 | ( 3) 5 per cent.? |
41856 | ( a) Do you regard such insurance as gambling or legitimate speculation from the standpoint of either insurer or insured? |
41856 | ( a) Under what conditions would you consider such a law socially beneficial? |
41856 | ( a) of long- time loans,( b) of short- time loans, and( c) of demand loans? |
41856 | ( b) Debarring all feelings of hostility and of sentimental attachment to home, is there any reason why the people of B should not all emigrate to A? |
41856 | ( b) Do you regard the issue of such policies on the part of the insurance companies as"sound"? |
41856 | ( b) If conditions are such as to lead to the territorial division of labor, which commodities are most likely to be produced in each country? |
41856 | ( b) What other agencies might accomplish the ends which such a law is designed to effect? |
41856 | ( b) What percentage of reserve is it carrying at the end of these operations? |
41856 | ( b) Would it be wise to make a similar prohibition on savings banks? |
41856 | ( b) if a substantial part of the product is marketed in competition with that of the local farmers? |
41856 | ( b) the single tax theory? |
41856 | ( c) About which of these commodities is there the least certainty on this point? |
41856 | ( c) Could B equalize conditions of production by enacting a protective tariff on the products of the two islands? |
41856 | ( c) What are the chief social and economic effects which you would expect from such a law? |
41856 | ( c) the theory of value under competitive conditions? |
41856 | 3. Who makes coins? |
41856 | 9. Who gained when Hawaiian sugar( before annexation) was admitted free of duty, while other sugar was taxed? |
41856 | ;( b) if the number of goods exchanged gradually increases twenty- five percent.? |
41856 | An industrial depression? |
41856 | Are countries? |
41856 | Are industrial accidents more frequent in low paid or in high paid occupations? |
41856 | Are men wealthy in proportion to the money they have? |
41856 | Are most positive laws intended to hinder competition or make it freer? |
41856 | Are strikes becoming more or less frequent and important in your state? |
41856 | Are the bank''s liabilities increased to precisely the same extent by the two transactions? |
41856 | Are the opportunities for workmen to rise to the rank of masters as great as formerly? |
41856 | Are there any other conditions which will tend to check the indefinite growth of combinations? |
41856 | Are these limitations in opposition to the principle by which private property is now generally defended? |
41856 | Between tariffs and factory legislation? |
41856 | Between the character of the people and the per capita wealth? |
41856 | By what other methods and in what degree could such taxation be extended? |
41856 | Can a bank that issues its own notes afford to lend cheaper than the ordinary capitalist? |
41856 | Can a country have a persisting excess of merchandise exports over merchandise imports? |
41856 | Can countries be grouped geographically according to per capita wealth? |
41856 | Can it be of advantage to trade freely with one nation if general free trade is bad? |
41856 | Can taxation be used to secure some of the profits of large corporations? |
41856 | Can you get a kind of money that will make the things that are sold, dearer, and the things that are bought, cheaper? |
41856 | Can you see any clear distinction between the public nature of a railroad and that of a horse and carriage? |
41856 | Coal? |
41856 | Could a country better do without money, horses, or roads? |
41856 | Could a railway in the United States advantageously float a large issue of 20-year bonds in the year 1916? |
41856 | Could not the local rates be lowered if the carriers advanced the rates on the long- distance haul? |
41856 | Could there be any incentive for the people of A to trade with the people of B? |
41856 | Did prices go up or down as a result? |
41856 | Do all banks issue notes? |
41856 | Do the figures on immigration show anything as to the need of legislation restricting immigration? |
41856 | Do they ever stand in the way of progress? |
41856 | Do trade unions increase or decrease the number of strikes? |
41856 | Do you consider that this use of the rediscounting facilities provided by the Federal Reserve System was in accord with sound banking principles? |
41856 | Do you know any large cities that are more favorable shipping points than neighboring towns? |
41856 | Do you know of any father who created more wealth because he could bequeath it to his son? |
41856 | Do you see any arguments to be advanced for pooling? |
41856 | Do you think the decision effective in stopping pooling? |
41856 | Do you value it more than the things it buys? |
41856 | Does a clearing house enable the banks that belong to it to get along with a smaller cash reserve? |
41856 | Does cost of service have anything to do with the rates charged by railroads? |
41856 | Does either transaction immediately lessen the bank''s cash reserve? |
41856 | Does every government enterprise necessarily narrow the field for private enterprise and diminish the amount of competition? |
41856 | Does gold cost the day- laborer as much in California as in New York? |
41856 | Does taxation ever infringe on the right of private property? |
41856 | Does the principle of the substitution of goods have any bearing on the value of metals under bimetallism? |
41856 | Does the public consider the growth of trusts to be good or bad? |
41856 | Does the son work as hard when he inherits his father''s wealth? |
41856 | For what reasons has a system of this kind not been developed in the U. S.? |
41856 | Give examples showing the difference between a gambling house and an insurance company? |
41856 | Has agricultural activity been accelerated or retarded? |
41856 | Has it received a set- back? |
41856 | Has the isothermal line any relation to the number of millionaires? |
41856 | Have trade unions raised or lowered the wages of non- union labor? |
41856 | Have you observed the growth of any local industry from a small beginning to large proportions? |
41856 | How are loans affected when the reserve limit as established either by law or custom is reached in England, Germany and the United States? |
41856 | How are notes issued under the Federal Reserve Act? |
41856 | How different from political freedom? |
41856 | How do urban and rural districts differ in their preference for and use of different kinds of bank credit? |
41856 | How does Massachusetts tax interstate railroads running through the state? |
41856 | How does it differ from a pool? |
41856 | How does the United States compare with other countries with respect to the estimated amounts and values of cereal products? |
41856 | How does the issue of bank notes differ from the lending of funds to depositors? |
41856 | How does the weighting affect your first conclusions regarding the changes in the cost of living? |
41856 | How has this been done? |
41856 | How is this affecting the incomes of various classes? |
41856 | How many people do it? |
41856 | How much money will each then have, and what will be the effect on prices, foreign trade, rate of exchange? |
41856 | How successful were they? |
41856 | How was this wealth distributed according to( a) the socialistic theory of value? |
41856 | How would it be affected if the value of gold should fall 10 per cent? |
41856 | How would the balance sheet of a commercial bank issuing an ordinary asset bank- note currency stand after the following operations? |
41856 | How would the balance sheet of a commercial bank stand after the following operations? |
41856 | How would the effects on society be different if prices were reduced by better organization and the prevention of waste? |
41856 | If England sells$ 10,000,000 worth of our securities to Americans, what is the effect on exchange rates? |
41856 | If a sum of$ 1,000 loaned in 1897 was returned in 1902, what was the difference in its purchasing power on its return and when it was loaned? |
41856 | If all the different denominations of media of exchange were doubled in number, exchanges remaining unchanged, what would be the effect upon prices? |
41856 | If all trade is exchange, do not the members of a trust reduce their income when they raise the price of their products by artificial agreement? |
41856 | If an affirmative answer be assumed, what has been the change in the value of money? |
41856 | If capital is needed in production why is the question of justice raised when its use is paid for? |
41856 | If demand exchange on London were selling at$ 4.835 in New York, would that indicate anything as to the relative values of our imports and exports? |
41856 | If every piece of money should miraculously be doubled in a night, whose interests would be affected? |
41856 | If foreign exchange suddenly rose several cents, while imports and exports remained the same, to what causes might it be due? |
41856 | If gold were to become as plentiful as iron, would it be worth more or less than iron? |
41856 | If it could be shown that trusts have lowered prices, should that fact exempt them from all interference from legislation? |
41856 | If it would pay us to admit goods free, may we be justified in taxing them to force concessions from the other country? |
41856 | If large shipments of wheat are made to England, will bills of exchange on London be higher or lower in New York? |
41856 | If money is a tool, what does it make? |
41856 | If production is reduced one- fourth by shorter hours, is"work made"to that degree for the unemployed? |
41856 | If so, how do you account for it? |
41856 | If so, how will this increase be gained? |
41856 | If so, is it socially justifiable? |
41856 | If so, of what classes of workers? |
41856 | If so, to what extent? |
41856 | If so, under what conditions? |
41856 | If so, where do they go? |
41856 | If so, would it be a wise measure? |
41856 | If socialism reduced the total product, would it still be desirable because of the better distribution? |
41856 | If the amount of coal in a country should be increased twenty- five per cent., in what percentage would you expect the value of coal to change? |
41856 | If the supply of labor of any class were to be decreased ten per cent., would wages rise in like proportion? |
41856 | If there is an increase in earnings, how will the price of each of the three kinds of securities of the corporation be affected? |
41856 | If there were no legal bar to a tariff between the states, would a tariff probably be imposed? |
41856 | If there were twice as much money in the world, would panics take place? |
41856 | If you can do more work in two hours than in one, can you do more continuously in sixteen consecutive hours than in eight? |
41856 | If you were an officer of a trade- union, would you begin a strike when trade was good or when it was poor? |
41856 | If your neighbor rides on a pass and you pay your fare, are you helping to pay for his ride? |
41856 | In a period of depression is there less money than usual in the country? |
41856 | In just what way did the rediscounting operations relieve the call money market? |
41856 | In the banks? |
41856 | In the case of a coöperative general store do economic profits emerge? |
41856 | In the case of which crops is the connection closest? |
41856 | In the development of a general system of workingmen''s insurance in the U. S., which one of the above forms will probably first come in? |
41856 | In the preceding exercise, do the data afford sufficient grounds for saying that the cost of living has moved either upward or downward? |
41856 | In those states which are regarded as having the most highly developed laws in this field? |
41856 | In what kinds of social legislation is the federal character of our government a serious bar to experimentation? |
41856 | In what way does taxation now shift the distribution of real incomes as among persons? |
41856 | In what ways and to what extent are trade conditions apt to be affected by: The increasing gold supply? |
41856 | In what ways is business affected by the condition of the crops? |
41856 | In what ways may the government determine the value of the monetary standard? |
41856 | In what ways may we understand the proposition that taxation should be proportioned to ability? |
41856 | In which year between 1890 and the present year would a fixed salary of$ 1,000 have gone farthest? |
41856 | In which year would its purchasing power have been least? |
41856 | In your own state? |
41856 | Increasing armies and navies? |
41856 | Iron and copper ore? |
41856 | Is a United States standard silver dollar commodity or fiduciary money? |
41856 | Is a community poor because it has little money in circulation or does it have little money in circulation because it is poor? |
41856 | Is a crisis caused by too much or too little money, or by some other influence? |
41856 | Is a high rate of money wages an obstacle to the successful conduct of industry in competition with countries where money wages are low? |
41856 | Is classification unfair discrimination? |
41856 | Is common, unskilled labor"scarce"( in any reasonable sense of the word) in China? |
41856 | Is custom a better regulator of economic action than competition? |
41856 | Is granting patents an interference with trade similar to tariffs? |
41856 | Is immigration now adding to the general welfare in the United States? |
41856 | Is it bad policy for California to buy New England manufactures? |
41856 | Is it bad policy to let the people of a suburban village spend money in the city for things that could be produced at home? |
41856 | Is it good public policy to allow a trust to undersell its smaller competitor in one district while it keeps up its prices elsewhere? |
41856 | Is it possible that the amount of all goods produced shall be in excess of the community''s power of consumption? |
41856 | Is it right that an inventor should by patent laws be able to keep the profits of his business high? |
41856 | Is it right that the lucky inventor of a popular toy should make$ 100 a day from it? |
41856 | Is it true of all commodities that changes in supply affect their value proportionally? |
41856 | Is it true of money? |
41856 | Is it useful? |
41856 | Is legislation in this field to be considered as subsidizing certain types of private enterprise? |
41856 | Is the corporation overcapitalized? |
41856 | Is the fact of one man''s gain and another man''s loss by chance of any economic or political importance? |
41856 | Is the fact that they are doing so an argument for or against the restriction of immigration? |
41856 | Is the right of bequest a necessary condition of private property? |
41856 | Is the tabular standard sound or unsound in principle? |
41856 | Is the value of gold and silver due to the action of government? |
41856 | Is there any difference in the matter of legality? |
41856 | Is there any likeness between trade- unions and tariffs? |
41856 | Is there any relation between the taxes paid and the benefits secured from government? |
41856 | Is there any rule for determining the limits of state interference? |
41856 | Is there any similarity between the methods of trade unions and the etiquette of the medical and the legal professions? |
41856 | Is there anything in the nature of mining that keeps the ratio of the supply of gold and silver nearly uniform? |
41856 | Is this a justifiable policy on their part? |
41856 | Is this a necessary conclusion? |
41856 | May a person owning a lot on a residence street of a city erect a glue factory on it? |
41856 | Might conditions be such that A could with advantage to itself exact a protective tariff? |
41856 | More generally, what determines the value of the currency? |
41856 | Of what importance is its legal tender quality? |
41856 | On p. 10, the question''What is meant by the"Factory System"?'' |
41856 | On p. 12, the question''What are the principal things besides money uses that cause a demand for gold and silver?'' |
41856 | Or should reduce rents for the less capable merchants and manufacturers? |
41856 | Ought lotteries to be permitted by law? |
41856 | Ought the law prohibit the sale of tickets by"scalpers"? |
41856 | State clearly what you mean by overcapitalization? |
41856 | Suppose an increase in the volume of our currency, due to a new issue of silver, what would be the effect upon international trade? |
41856 | Textile fibres? |
41856 | The agricultural situation? |
41856 | The standard of living-- up or down? |
41856 | The trust movement? |
41856 | Through what historic stages has production passed? |
41856 | To what kinds of taxes, if to any, is the principle of progression inapplicable and why? |
41856 | Under private property, can men complain of the use made by others of their wealth on the ground merely that it was unwise? |
41856 | Under what conditions can this be profitably done? |
41856 | Under what conditions will"bad money"fail to displace"good money"from circulation? |
41856 | Upon what considerations are commodities classified for shipment by railroads? |
41856 | Was it the best possible use of the rediscounting mechanism? |
41856 | What advantages do the advocates of separation claim for their plan? |
41856 | What are municipal franchises? |
41856 | What are the advantages and disadvantages of a seigniorage tax? |
41856 | What are the chief causes of the origin and rise of trade unions? |
41856 | What are the chief facts of interest in these cases? |
41856 | What are the chief methods by which trusts or combinations have sought to make economies in management? |
41856 | What are the chief reasons for the governmental regulation of railways? |
41856 | What are the conditions favorable to national agreements between trade unions and employers''associations? |
41856 | What are the conditions of economically sound insurance? |
41856 | What are the effects of either? |
41856 | What are the essential differences between these three forms of insurance? |
41856 | What are the functions of money? |
41856 | What are the functions performed by a bank? |
41856 | What are the limits to the price- fixing and profit- earning powers of monopolies? |
41856 | What are the main arguments for and against the city ownership and control of gas and waterworks? |
41856 | What are the main reasons given for the ratio of 16 to 1? |
41856 | What are the nature and purpose of legislation restricting the investments of savings banks? |
41856 | What are the principal things besides money uses that cause a demand for gold and silver? |
41856 | What are the qualities of metallic money? |
41856 | What are the recognized limitations upon the right of private property? |
41856 | What are the sources of income to a bank? |
41856 | What are these restrictions in this state? |
41856 | What are vested rights? |
41856 | What arguments advanced in favor of bimetallism in 1896 are inapplicable to- day? |
41856 | What can you learn from this statement about the kind of business which the bank is carrying on, and its power to withstand a financial storm? |
41856 | What cases have you seen where the railroads impose unjustly on the public? |
41856 | What causes may produce either? |
41856 | What change in it has lately been going on? |
41856 | What change, if any, will there be in the return to the indirect agents? |
41856 | What changes are likely to occur with reference to the occupation of the local population? |
41856 | What classes of economic goods or services are regulated by law and why? |
41856 | What classes of interests are affected by increasing the minimum weight for carloads? |
41856 | What classes of thinkers are most inclined to take up socialism? |
41856 | What conception of income does the recent income tax embody? |
41856 | What considerations have probably led to the establishment of the above rates? |
41856 | What defects, if any, do you see in the Massachusetts plan? |
41856 | What determines its value? |
41856 | What determines the amount of money needed by different persons, towns, states, and nations? |
41856 | What determines the maximum study time for the earnest student? |
41856 | What do students of the question think of it? |
41856 | What do these show as to the position of the U. S. in international commerce? |
41856 | What does a bank do for a community? |
41856 | What does this indicate regarding taxation? |
41856 | What does this indicate? |
41856 | What economic changes occurred in your own community in the panic of 1893- 94, or in the years 1903- 04, or in 1907- 08? |
41856 | What effect on exchange has the holding of American bonds abroad? |
41856 | What effect will this action have on the number of coins circulating? |
41856 | What effect would it have if the state should make laborers work for unsuccessful employers at lower wages than for successful ones? |
41856 | What element of security is furnished by clearing houses during panics? |
41856 | What forces can you assign as causes of the changes? |
41856 | What forms help the fittest to survive? |
41856 | What forms of state activity favor survival of unfit men and bad traits of character? |
41856 | What gives rise to the belief sometimes held that money is an invariable standard of value? |
41856 | What harm can there be in the acceptance of passes by judges, legislators, and other public officials? |
41856 | What has been the effect of the recent immigration into the United States upon the use of machinery? |
41856 | What have been the theories put forward to justify the system of private property in the past? |
41856 | What have you noted as to the benefits or hardships of restricting child labor in factories? |
41856 | What help should the law of wages give in explaining the present inequality as among the wage scales in Germany, France, England and the U. S.? |
41856 | What in your opinion is the correct explanation of crises? |
41856 | What is a financial crisis? |
41856 | What is a simple price agreement? |
41856 | What is economic freedom? |
41856 | What is it a citizen gets in return for his taxes? |
41856 | What is it to earn a living? |
41856 | What is meant by fiat money? |
41856 | What is meant by the separation of state and local revenues? |
41856 | What is meant by the"Factory System"? |
41856 | What is that standard now in America? |
41856 | What is the advantage to a bank of the right to issue bank notes? |
41856 | What is the bearing of this fact upon the theory of international trade? |
41856 | What is the doctrine of economic harmonies? |
41856 | What is the effect of private property on saving? |
41856 | What is the essential economic difference between gambling and insurance? |
41856 | What is the extent of the influence one nation can have on the ratio of the two precious metals? |
41856 | What is the function of the standard of deferred payments? |
41856 | What is the general tendency of immigrants in the matter of settlement in urban and rural communities? |
41856 | What is the importance of a system of weighting? |
41856 | What is the largest manufacturing establishment in your home town? |
41856 | What is the present status of the inheritance tax in the American commonwealths? |
41856 | What is the public sentiment in your home community as to the ownership of industries by the town or city? |
41856 | What is the theory of money held by bimetallists? |
41856 | What is the total quantity of such new coins the government can issue and keep in circulation? |
41856 | What is the trust problem? |
41856 | What is the"long and short haul"clause of the Interstate Commerce Act? |
41856 | What is your judgment with reference to its advisability? |
41856 | What is your opinion concerning the justice of progressive taxation? |
41856 | What keeps any of it there? |
41856 | What kinds of municipal industries have you seen in operation? |
41856 | What large trusts have recently been formed? |
41856 | What legal rights do the builders of a railroad have that are not enjoyed by all citizens? |
41856 | What less immediate effects would be likely to follow, and why? |
41856 | What ought to be the characteristics of a standard unit of value? |
41856 | What physical conditions account for the greatness of ancient Egypt, of Venice, of Holland, of England, of the United States? |
41856 | What problems are presented by these facts? |
41856 | What reasons are given in justification of laws closing barber shops on Sundays? |
41856 | What reasons may be given for or against this opinion? |
41856 | What relation can be observed between general industrial conditions and the per capita wealth? |
41856 | What relation has improved transportation and other means of communication to trusts? |
41856 | What remedy has the foreman for an inefficient laborer working under the time- wage system? |
41856 | What seems to be the attitude of the federal courts as to the lawfulness of boycotts? |
41856 | What specific features of the recent railroad and trust legislation are aimed at the prevention of these practices? |
41856 | What troubles arise from city politics? |
41856 | What was the percentage change in the value of money from the base period to 1912? |
41856 | What were the conditions which led to the income tax legislation of 1913? |
41856 | What will be the probable effect on local agriculture,( a) if the entire product of the estate is consumed upon it? |
41856 | What will determine whether this combination possesses monopoly power? |
41856 | What would be the effect on the amount of income received by land owners? |
41856 | What would have happened if a free silver law had been enacted in the United States in 1900? |
41856 | What would it have been in 1912? |
41856 | When does an industrious man stop working on his own farm, and why? |
41856 | When gold comes out of the mine is the gain to the community greater or less than when the same value of grain is harvested? |
41856 | When goods are exchanged for money or money for goods, what is the gain? |
41856 | When in New York a sight draft on London for £5000 sells for$ 24,150, in which direction are gold remittances likely to be moving? |
41856 | Where are they? |
41856 | Which of them are most satisfactory in your judgment? |
41856 | Which one of the following views do you think to be nearest the truth and why? |
41856 | Which the least so? |
41856 | Which two arguments against progressive taxation do you consider the weakest and why? |
41856 | Which two arguments in favor of progressive taxation do you consider the strongest and why? |
41856 | Why did the banks often find it more profitable to use their money in other ways than by issuing bank notes? |
41856 | Why do you value money? |
41856 | Why does nearly all the gold produced in California leave the state? |
41856 | Why does the public consent to grant patents or public franchises? |
41856 | Why does the question of the control of the railways in the interest of the public present especial difficulties in America? |
41856 | Why has not the tabular standard of deferred payments come into common use? |
41856 | Why has the corporate form of business organizations not been as extensively introduced into the farming industry as into other industries? |
41856 | Why is gold ever shipped from California to New York? |
41856 | Why is it that immigrants are now taking up the farms of New England which have, in some cases for years, been abandoned by native farmers? |
41856 | Why is transportation a greater problem in the United States than in Europe? |
41856 | Why or why not? |
41856 | Why should preachers get half- fare rates? |
41856 | Why? |
41856 | Why? |
41856 | Why? |
41856 | Why? |
41856 | Why? |
41856 | Will a day''s work of a common laborer buy more to- day than it would a half century ago? |
41856 | Will bullion owners bring their bullion to the mint for coinage? |
41856 | Will prices be affected? |
41856 | With increasing division of labor is there greater or less opportunity for the payment of laborers according to the piece- wage plan? |
41856 | With reference to its migration? |
41856 | Within what limitations? |
41856 | Would a nation be poorer, if, like Sparta, it prohibited all money? |
41856 | Would a number of smaller establishments of the same sort and with the same aggregate capacity succeed as well? |
41856 | Would a railroad wish to float such an issue if it could? |
41856 | Would an ideal monetary standard always measure the same quantity of goods? |
41856 | Would gold be shipped under these conditions and if so in which direction? |
41856 | Would it pay the corporation to insure with some company? |
41856 | Would jewelers make better ones? |
41856 | Would socialism guarantee steadiness or regularity in economic activity, thus eliminating the phenomena of economic crises and depressions? |
41856 | Would there be any greater advantage to either of the countries engaged in trade? |
41856 | Would this effect be lasting? |
41856 | Would your answer apply to the labor standard? |
41856 | Would your answer depend at all upon the condition of our currency at the time the increase occurred? |
41856 | greater by reason of the protective tariff upon foreign marbles, does this show that the tariff increases the wealth of the protecting country? |
41856 | in the United States? |
41856 | of the total money in the world is the yearly output of gold; of silver; of gold and silver? |
40077 | 4. Who gained when Hawaiian sugar( before annexation) was admitted free of duty, while other sugar was taxed? |
40077 | 4. Who makes coins? |
40077 | 5. Who has the greater political power, the president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, or the governor of that state? |
40077 | 6 Is there a different term for land that is wealth and land that is not? |
40077 | 6. Who runs the business in a large store owned by a large family? |
40077 | 8. Who is the employer in a coöperative cooper- shop whose superintendent is elected by the workmen? |
40077 | After a panic? |
40077 | Again, how is to be measured the economic service of the tree and of the labor needed for gathering its fruits? |
40077 | An industrial depression? |
40077 | Are charity workers usually well paid? |
40077 | Are countries? |
40077 | Are fine products high in price because wages are high, or vice versa? |
40077 | Are high wages and high interest seen to go together? |
40077 | Are interest rates changing in America? |
40077 | Are men less able to bargain for the loan of money than for other things? |
40077 | Are men wealthy in proportion to the money they have? |
40077 | Are merchants producers of wealth, or are their profits merely subtracted from the wealth already produced? |
40077 | Are most positive laws intended to hinder competition or make it freer? |
40077 | Are national bonds or promissory notes, wealth? |
40077 | Are not prices determined by the personal whim of industrial despots who can bid defiance to the laws of price? |
40077 | Are services, music, a theatrical performance, a gambler''s pack of cards, wealth? |
40077 | Are the conditions of the competition fair? |
40077 | Are the following wealth: food, tobacco, medicine, whisky, good looks, good health, a wooden leg? |
40077 | Are the high wages of skilled labor deducted from the wages of unskilled? |
40077 | Are the opportunities for workmen to rise to the rank of masters as great as formerly? |
40077 | Are the other shares independent of wages? |
40077 | Are the profits of the employer deducted from wages? |
40077 | Are the wants of a savage more easily satisfied than those of civilized men? |
40077 | Are there any things, not free goods, that could be indefinitely increased without increasing difficulty? |
40077 | Are there different economic terms for hewn and unhewn blocks of stone? |
40077 | Are they not all scarce and desirable goods yielding a limited supply of uses? |
40077 | Are wages independent of the other kinds of income? |
40077 | Are you willing to pay more for goods in order to have a choice of stores? |
40077 | At what point will this movement stop? |
40077 | At what rate can it exchange its products for the products of others( including other trusts)? |
40077 | Before a financial crisis how are prices, high or low? |
40077 | Between tariffs and factory legislation? |
40077 | But how are they to get it? |
40077 | But how is it in case the agent is used to gratify persons other than the owner? |
40077 | But what kind of labor is to be taken, that of the lender or that of the borrower, or that of some one else? |
40077 | But what of the high rewards of skilled service ministering to worthy ends? |
40077 | But what shall be said of volunteer firemen that let an old house burn down to provide labor for carpenters and"to make business good"? |
40077 | Can a bank that issues its own notes afford to lend cheaper than the ordinary capitalist? |
40077 | Can a manufacturer pay the same to laborers if the product will be marketed next year, as he can if it is to be marketed to- morrow? |
40077 | Can a person owning a lot on a residence street of a city erect a glue- factory on it? |
40077 | Can brokers fix the price of grain on the market? |
40077 | Can it be maintained that one tenth of the labor supply fixes the value of all? |
40077 | Can it be of advantage to trade freely with one nation if general free trade is bad? |
40077 | Can it safely be assumed that every trade with a foreigner is less advantageous than one with a fellow- citizen? |
40077 | Can law fix the rate of interest at any point desired? |
40077 | Can people live on the future, consuming in advance of production? |
40077 | Can taxation be used to secure some of the profits of large corporations? |
40077 | Can the large factory always outsell the small one? |
40077 | Can the water rise higher than its source? |
40077 | Can this be avoided? |
40077 | Can wage- earners be shut out from all advantages in the land of the country? |
40077 | Can we determine what luxury is, or give the notion definiteness? |
40077 | Can you describe from your own experience any example of readjustment of labor due to introduction of new machinery? |
40077 | Can you excuse the sense of injustice felt by the hungry man when he sees you wear patent- leather shoes and kid gloves? |
40077 | Can you get a kind of money that will make the things that are sold, dearer, and the things that are bought, cheaper? |
40077 | Can you see any clear distinction between the public nature of a railroad and of a horse and carriage? |
40077 | Could a country better do without money, horses, or roads? |
40077 | Did prices go up or down as a result? |
40077 | Did the discovery of America make the study of political economy more important? |
40077 | Ditto in agriculture, mining, commerce, or manufactures? |
40077 | Do all banks issue notes? |
40077 | Do improvements in agriculture increase or decrease the rent of land? |
40077 | Do men work better under threat or when their pride is appealed to? |
40077 | Do people actually expend their incomes so as to get the maximum utility judged by a standard they would admit to be morally sound? |
40077 | Do people save more in good times or hard times? |
40077 | Do savings- banks and insurance companies stimulate saving, or do they exist because of a disposition to save? |
40077 | Do sons usually follow the father''s trade? |
40077 | Do the same influences act in the case of men? |
40077 | Do they ever stand in the way of progress? |
40077 | Do you buy what you most desire? |
40077 | Do you ever take account of a difference of five cents in deciding whether to purchase? |
40077 | Do you expect to acquire wealth more easily as a result of the study of political economy? |
40077 | Do you feel a sense of injustice when you read of a millionaire''s ball if you are not a millionaire? |
40077 | Do you know any large cities that are more favorable shipping- points than neighboring towns? |
40077 | Do you know any persons that work from a sense of duty alone? |
40077 | Do you know from personal observation whether a Mexican, a German, or an American, is the best workman? |
40077 | Do you know of any father who created more wealth because he could bequeath it to his son? |
40077 | Do you think that store- keepers fix the price of the produce they buy of the farmers? |
40077 | Do you think that the amount of work is reduced by new machinery? |
40077 | Do you value it more than the things it buys? |
40077 | Does a clearing- house enable the banks that belong to it to get along with a smaller cash reserve? |
40077 | Does a greater expenditure on himself give him a larger sum of gratification in life than a moderate expenditure would give? |
40077 | Does economic theory throw any light on the ethics of miserliness? |
40077 | Does gold cost the day- laborer as much in California as in New York? |
40077 | Does he devote his spare hours to the"Scientific American"or to the"Police Gazette"? |
40077 | Does he enjoy music, the theater, or the cheaper attractions of Coney Island and the Bowery? |
40077 | Does it change the utility of a load of powder to touch a match to it? |
40077 | Does it differ from rent? |
40077 | Does it wish the services of Cornelius Vanderbilt in organizing a great system of railroads, of Andrew Carnegie, of Pierpont Morgan? |
40077 | Does luck have greater influence on business success in an old country or a new one? |
40077 | Does taxation ever infringe on the right of private property? |
40077 | Does the economic idea of production conflict with the physical principle that matter can not be created? |
40077 | Does the existence of the land of California have any effect on rents in New York city? |
40077 | Does the ownership of land give a monopoly? |
40077 | Does the pain of toil repel more than its fruits attract? |
40077 | Does the presence of a policeman increase or diminish competition among men? |
40077 | Does the principle of the substitution of goods have any bearing on the value of metals under bimetallism? |
40077 | Does the public consider the growth of trusts to be good or bad? |
40077 | Does the rent of pianos, type- writers, or masquerade- suits depend on the value of the thing rented? |
40077 | Does the son work as hard when he inherits his father''s wealth? |
40077 | English farmers raise thirty- five bushels of wheat per acre, Americans perhaps fifteen; why this difference? |
40077 | From an economic standpoint, can we say that robbery really reduces the wealth in existence? |
40077 | Geology answers the question"What?" |
40077 | Give other examples showing the difference between a gambling- house and an insurance company? |
40077 | Has the isothermal line any relation to the number of millionaires? |
40077 | Has the owner of a poor gold- mine a monopoly? |
40077 | Has the owner of a rich mine a monopoly? |
40077 | Has the principle of the survival of the fittest any influence on the population of America? |
40077 | Has the rainfall any relation to the density of population? |
40077 | Has"a good chance in life"much to do with success? |
40077 | Have you observed the growth of any local industry from a small beginning to large proportions? |
40077 | He has a dollar; will he go to the theater or buy ten dishes of ice- cream? |
40077 | Henry van Dyke in one of his essays puts into the mouth of his boy the question,"Father, who owns the mountains?" |
40077 | How can a net gain ever result from a smaller sale? |
40077 | How can a yard of cloth be said to be distributed to the labor and capital producing it? |
40077 | How can bricks be limited in number, being made as they are from one of the commonest materials on the earth''s surface? |
40077 | How can the quantity theory hold in these conditions? |
40077 | How can the use of a flock of sheep be of value to one who must return them all to the owner? |
40077 | How can they ever be different? |
40077 | How different from political freedom? |
40077 | How do Englishmen invest in American railroads? |
40077 | How do livery charges in a college town in commencement week illustrate the subject of rent? |
40077 | How does a new railroad affect the value of the land it passes through? |
40077 | How does the hire of a team of horses resemble the rent of land? |
40077 | How effective is it? |
40077 | How has this been done? |
40077 | How is it with the nation in time of war? |
40077 | How is society to grant it to them? |
40077 | How is the blacksmith free to compete with the physician and how not? |
40077 | How is this great political problem to be met except by an appreciation of its importance and by a growth of public integrity? |
40077 | How many college students''budgets could pass the censorship of Hetty Green, reputed to be the richest woman in America? |
40077 | How many motives led you to come to college? |
40077 | How many of the men you know at the head of large businesses started life poor? |
40077 | How many people do it? |
40077 | How shall it be judged what he deserves? |
40077 | How should the income of an inventor be classified, as wages or profits? |
40077 | How successful were they? |
40077 | How wide a knowledge would a complete understanding of industrial society require? |
40077 | How would the effects on society be different if prices were reduced by better organization and the prevention of waste? |
40077 | How would the rate of interest be affected if the amount of money were doubled at once? |
40077 | How would the rent of a rocky island be affected if it became a summer resort? |
40077 | How, and to what extent? |
40077 | If a business is very successful and its dividends double, what will be the effect on the selling price of its stock? |
40077 | If a man is not content with$ 2 a day, why does he not do work that is paid$ 5 a day? |
40077 | If a$ 100 share of railroad stock sells at par when interest on loans is at 5%, what will be its price when interest rises to 6%? |
40077 | If all day- laborers should agree to work with one hand tied behind them, would their wages go up or down? |
40077 | If all the land on an island were equally fertile and equally convenient of access, would any of it pay a rent? |
40077 | If all trade is exchange do not the members of a trust reduce their income when they raise the price of their products by artificial agreement? |
40077 | If as much is produced in a general eight- hour day, who benefits? |
40077 | If capital is needed in production why is the question of justice raised when its use is paid for? |
40077 | If every piece of money should miraculously be doubled in a night, whose interests would be affected? |
40077 | If four hours''work a day would enable him to live, will he work longer or will he stop? |
40077 | If gold were to become as plentiful as iron, would it be worth more or less than iron? |
40077 | If he would rather dance than eat, is it labor? |
40077 | If it would pay us to admit goods free, may we be justified in taxing them to force concessions from the other country? |
40077 | If large shipments of wheat are made to England, will bills of exchange on London be higher or lower in New York? |
40077 | If manna fell from heaven daily in a climate where clothing and shelter were unnecessary, what effect on wealth would result? |
40077 | If money is a tool, what does it make? |
40077 | If money wages are higher and general prices are lower, how is the laborer affected? |
40077 | If neither can be credited with the whole value, how is any distribution to be made between them? |
40077 | If not, what will be the effect of a change? |
40077 | If one company controlled all the petroleum in the world, what would it consider in fixing the selling price? |
40077 | If one is more skilful or stronger, or owns the boat and the tackle, how would it affect the division? |
40077 | If production is reduced one fourth by shorter hours, is"work made"to that degree for the unemployed? |
40077 | If rewards were equal, what would determine the choice of work? |
40077 | If so, how do you account for it? |
40077 | If so, how is the value of the labor adjusted to its product? |
40077 | If so, in what way? |
40077 | If so, then why not at zero; if not, then why fix any maximum rate of interest? |
40077 | If so, to what extent? |
40077 | If so, would it be a wise measure? |
40077 | If socialism reduced the total product, would it still be desirable because of the better distribution? |
40077 | If the law permits certain classes to be fleeced without redress, is wealth thereby reduced? |
40077 | If the supply of labor of any class were to be decreased 10% would wages rise in like proportion? |
40077 | If the value of improvements on land is all counted, is there anything over? |
40077 | If there were no legal bar to a tariff between the states, would a tariff probably be imposed? |
40077 | If there were twice as much money in the world, would panics take place? |
40077 | If they are to stop short of the extreme of socialism, where shall the line be drawn? |
40077 | If they get more, others will get less; and with what result? |
40077 | If to both, in what proportion? |
40077 | If true, why? |
40077 | If two men of equal skill go fishing together, how would they find a rule for dividing the catch? |
40077 | If women are paid less than men for the same work, why are men employed at all? |
40077 | If you can do more work in two hours than in one, can you do more continuously in sixteen consecutive hours than in eight? |
40077 | If you could, would you do nothing always? |
40077 | If you do not enjoy it? |
40077 | If you ever worked for wages, or a salary, was that the only motive? |
40077 | If you found$ 10 to- day on the street, what would you do with it? |
40077 | If you never eat corn- bread, will the failure of the corn- crop affect your grocery bill? |
40077 | If you owned the Golden Gate, or the harbor of New York, could you rent it? |
40077 | If you were an officer of a trade- union, would you begin a strike when trade was good or when it was poor? |
40077 | If you were starting a factory on credit, would you rent the machines or buy them with borrowed money? |
40077 | If your neighbor rides on a pass and you pay your fare, are you helping to pay for his ride? |
40077 | If, through greater efficiency of labor, wealth increases, which share benefits? |
40077 | In a period of depression is there less money than usual in the country? |
40077 | In a time of high excitement gold was sold for more at one side of the room than at the other side; how account for this? |
40077 | In the banks? |
40077 | In the wide range of subjects passed in review has been sought the answer to one question: What determines and affects the values of good? |
40077 | In the world? |
40077 | In these cases what affects the rate of interest? |
40077 | In what sense have we assumed that competition exists? |
40077 | In what sense is a street- railway a monopoly? |
40077 | In what sense ought a cause of value be spoken of? |
40077 | In what ways are retail stores wasteful in their expenditures? |
40077 | In what ways can a lender collect a high rate of interest without appearing to do so? |
40077 | In what ways can a piece of iron be consumed, economically speaking? |
40077 | In what ways does competition reduce the total product? |
40077 | In what ways does labor get paid for its share, and who pays it? |
40077 | In what ways is the rate of interest affected by the rise or fall of the value of money? |
40077 | In what ways may we understand the proposition that taxation should be proportioned to ability? |
40077 | Is a book full of useful information, wealth? |
40077 | Is a head full of useful knowledge, wealth? |
40077 | Is a ship at the bottom of the ocean, or gold in the mine, wealth? |
40077 | Is advertising of any social service or is its sole purpose to divert trade from one merchant to another? |
40077 | Is all land useful? |
40077 | Is all land wealth? |
40077 | Is any other result thinkable? |
40077 | Is barter more or less frequent now in America than formerly? |
40077 | Is common, unskilled labor"scarce"( in any reasonable sense of the word) in China? |
40077 | Is competition severe in the renting of land in your community? |
40077 | Is custom a better regulator of economic action than competition? |
40077 | Is dancing labor? |
40077 | Is dynamite? |
40077 | Is granting patents an interference with trade similar to tariffs? |
40077 | Is his recreation permeated with a certain intellectual ambition? |
40077 | Is hunger the cause of food? |
40077 | Is it an evil? |
40077 | Is it bad policy for California to buy New England manufactures? |
40077 | Is it bad policy to let the people of Palo Alto spend money in San Francisco for things that could be produced at home? |
40077 | Is it good public policy to allow a trust to undersell its smaller competitor in one district while it keeps up its prices elsewhere? |
40077 | Is it money or things that the borrower wants? |
40077 | Is it more or less common than formerly for them to do so? |
40077 | Is it possible to compare the value of the portrait- painter''s service with that of the gardener? |
40077 | Is it possible to do twice the amount of business in any store- room by doubling the stock and the force of clerks? |
40077 | Is it possible to expand a university indefinitely by increasing the force of teachers and the equipment, without enlarging the buildings? |
40077 | Is it production to buy fifty cents''worth of yarn and knit a pair of socks worth twenty- five cents if you enjoy doing it? |
40077 | Is it right that an inventor should by patent laws be able to keep the profits of his business high? |
40077 | Is it right that the lucky inventor of a popular toy should make$ 100 a day from it? |
40077 | Is it surprising that in human affairs still less prediction is possible? |
40077 | Is it therefore not subject to economic influences? |
40077 | Is it well to be contented with your lot? |
40077 | Is it well to be discontented? |
40077 | Is luxury necessary to give employment to labor? |
40077 | Is modern business competition a competition of men only? |
40077 | Is more or less time needed in production with the best machinery and processes? |
40077 | Is part of a stock of goods ever worth more than the whole? |
40077 | Is political economy a study of things or of men? |
40077 | Is political economy necessary to the understanding of the business world, or vice versa? |
40077 | Is pride as powerful a motive as greed, in economic action? |
40077 | Is smoking high- priced cigars economically justifiable, assuming that the smoker is wealthy and does not injure his health thereby? |
40077 | Is the dancing of a dancing- master labor? |
40077 | Is the fact of one man''s gain and another man''s loss by chance of any economic or political importance? |
40077 | Is the immorality of betting based on economic grounds? |
40077 | Is the last bait worth more when the fish are biting well? |
40077 | Is the present condition a normal one-- is this prosperity likely to grow or to decline? |
40077 | Is the process, on the whole, worth while? |
40077 | Is the public school system an economic factor? |
40077 | Is the railroad productive? |
40077 | Is the rental a moderate return on the investment? |
40077 | Is the spendthrift the best friend of labor? |
40077 | Is the value of gold and silver due to the action of government? |
40077 | Is the work of any kind fixed in quantity? |
40077 | Is there a strong selfish motive for men to increase their efficiency in most industries? |
40077 | Is there any causal relationship between commerce and manufactures? |
40077 | Is there any likeness between trade- unions and tariffs? |
40077 | Is there any relation between the taxes paid and the benefits secured from government? |
40077 | Is there any rule for determining the limits of state interference? |
40077 | Is there any similarity between the methods of trade- unions and the etiquette of the medical and the legal professions? |
40077 | Is there anything in common between"cost, the onerous exertion necessary to get goods,"and cost as the money expenses of production? |
40077 | Is there anything in the nature of mining that keeps the ratio of the supply of gold and silver nearly uniform? |
40077 | Is there competition between the owner of good land and the owner of poor land? |
40077 | Is this because they are the lucky possessors of a rare gift, or because they perform a social service deserving such reward? |
40077 | Is this due to the appreciation of money? |
40077 | Is this good worth more now or next week? |
40077 | Is this like any tariff arguments you have heard? |
40077 | Is this sound in an economic sense? |
40077 | Is water useful? |
40077 | Is well- being in proportion to wealth? |
40077 | It may well be asked, What method shall be pursued to reform it? |
40077 | Liking realism, does he read Howells or the blood- curdling serial entitled"Piping the Mystery"? |
40077 | May a singer of songs or a mixer of drinks be called a productive laborer? |
40077 | Men like to answer out of their ignorance the question, Whither are we tending? |
40077 | Now when such a durable income is bought outright, what is the basis on which its value is estimated? |
40077 | Of books? |
40077 | Of tame pigeons? |
40077 | Of what practical use do you think political economy is? |
40077 | Often the question asked when one first sees a moving trolley car or automobile or bicycle is: What makes it go? |
40077 | On agricultural rents in New York state? |
40077 | One may ask, How, if the miller in the long run benefits, can the speculator gain? |
40077 | One may well ask, How did they come into the important places they occupy? |
40077 | Or should reduce rents for the less capable merchants and manufacturers? |
40077 | Ought legislation attempt to prevent luxury, or can public opinion affect it? |
40077 | Ought lotteries to be permitted by law? |
40077 | Ought speculation in mines to be permitted by law? |
40077 | Ought the law prohibit the sale of tickets by"scalpers"? |
40077 | Ought the profits of the farmer from a sudden rise in the value of wheat be confiscated to the public? |
40077 | Shall a piece of coal be studied in geology, botany, physics, chemistry, or economics? |
40077 | Shall this apple be eaten now or next winter? |
40077 | That of the lender, who may be rich, or that of the borrower, who may be poor? |
40077 | The answer is in the form of a question, Could society have the service without the reward? |
40077 | The economist first asks, What is the effect of utility on value? |
40077 | The ethical and patriotic thought is not,"How will this affect my interests?" |
40077 | The first question to ask in the part of the study of economic society here undertaken is: What is its motive force? |
40077 | The individual asks,"Am I bound to sacrifice my comfort and happiness to the general good?" |
40077 | The law determines the limits of property, but what determines the limits of the law? |
40077 | The ownership of a horse? |
40077 | The question arises: which is cause, which effect? |
40077 | The question is raised in many minds, If private property is not an absolute right, what shall be its limits? |
40077 | The question is: how and in what degree does this scarcity cause value to attach to labor? |
40077 | The question now is, What is the effect of a seigniorage charge on the value of the coin as compared with the bullion that is in it? |
40077 | The question of luxury leads back to the question of distribution: Has the man honestly gained his wealth? |
40077 | The question the law asks and answers regarding wealth is not_ What_, but_ Who?_ Who is the owner, who should control, receive, enjoy the income? |
40077 | The question the law asks and answers regarding wealth is not_ What_, but_ Who?_ Who is the owner, who should control, receive, enjoy the income? |
40077 | The question was once asked in Parliament,"What is a pound?" |
40077 | The rich in the abundance of labor? |
40077 | This is past and present; what of the economic future? |
40077 | Through what agency does the Western farmer borrow Eastern capital? |
40077 | Through what historic stages has production passed? |
40077 | Under private property, can men complain of the use made by others of their wealth on the ground merely that it was unwise? |
40077 | WHAT IS A DOCTRINE OF POPULATION? |
40077 | Was it really the stock, the old mine, or the new hole in the mountain- side that had increased in value? |
40077 | Was the great Chicago fire, which led to the rebuilding of the city, a good thing economically? |
40077 | Was the net result a gain or a loss of employment? |
40077 | Was the rise in fortune due most often to chance, inheritance of wealth, or exceptional ability and power of work? |
40077 | Was there an unearned increment in both cases, and of the same kind? |
40077 | Were they, on the whole, good for the community? |
40077 | What advantages are there to manufacturers in combination? |
40077 | What and where are they? |
40077 | What application do you think the principle of diminishing returns has to the question of population? |
40077 | What are complementary goods? |
40077 | What are municipal franchises? |
40077 | What are the chief elements of business success? |
40077 | What are the difficulties in determining tenants''improvements? |
40077 | What are the main arguments for and against the city ownership and control of gas and waterworks? |
40077 | What are the main reasons given for the ratio of 16 to 1? |
40077 | What are the main social conditions necessary to saving? |
40077 | What are the most obvious ways of increasing the productiveness of land? |
40077 | What are the principal things besides money uses that cause a demand for gold and silver? |
40077 | What are the sources of income to a bank? |
40077 | What are vested rights? |
40077 | What can it get them for? |
40077 | What can the workman do to protect himself? |
40077 | What cases have you seen where great skill came from practice? |
40077 | What cases have you seen where the railways impose unjustly on the public? |
40077 | What causes a demand for an additional supply of food? |
40077 | What changes should be made in it? |
40077 | What classes of thinkers are most inclined to take up socialism? |
40077 | What concern have the poor in the abundance of capital? |
40077 | What determines the amount of money needed by different persons, towns, states, and nations? |
40077 | What determines the maximum study- time for the earnest student? |
40077 | What determines whether a crop is poor or good: the ground, the weather, or the farmer? |
40077 | What different ideas does the expression"distribution of wealth"suggest to you? |
40077 | What different methods of obtaining an income have you noted among the men you know? |
40077 | What do students of the question think of it? |
40077 | What do you know about the methods of renting mines? |
40077 | What does a bank do for a community? |
40077 | What does this indicate regarding taxation? |
40077 | What does this indicate? |
40077 | What economic changes occurred in your own community in the panic of 1893- 4, or in the years 1903- 4? |
40077 | What effect has republican government on the efficiency of labor? |
40077 | What effect on exchange has the holding of American bonds abroad? |
40077 | What effect on prices should be expected from an invention that makes possible the carrying of fresh meat from South America to England? |
40077 | What effect on wages and interest does the bringing in of foreign capital have? |
40077 | What effect on wealth would a change of climate have, whereby the consumption of coal would be decreased? |
40077 | What effect would it have if the state should make laborers work for unsuccessful employers at lower wages than for successful ones? |
40077 | What element of security is furnished by clearing- houses during panics? |
40077 | What else? |
40077 | What factors of production must be combined by a savage to produce a canoe? |
40077 | What forms help the fittest to survive? |
40077 | What forms of state activity favor survival of unfit men and bad traits of character? |
40077 | What functions does money perform in society? |
40077 | What gain is it for men to work together instead of singly? |
40077 | What gives rise to the belief sometimes held that money is an invariable standard of value? |
40077 | What harm can there be in the acceptance of passes by judges, legislators, and other public officials? |
40077 | What have you noted as to the benefits or hardships of restricting child labor in factories? |
40077 | What have you read this year about reciprocity? |
40077 | What important personal traits are needed to make a man an efficient market- gardener? |
40077 | What influence has commercial morality on saving? |
40077 | What influence has the formation of joint- stock companies on saving? |
40077 | What interests favor and what oppose the building of an isthmian canal? |
40077 | What is a financial crisis? |
40077 | What is discount and deposit? |
40077 | What is economic freedom? |
40077 | What is influencing the change? |
40077 | What is it a citizen gets in return for his taxes? |
40077 | What is it to be economical of money? |
40077 | What is it to earn a living? |
40077 | What is meant by fiat money? |
40077 | What is meant by the standard of life? |
40077 | What is production? |
40077 | What is speculation? |
40077 | What is stumpage? |
40077 | What is the cost of a good you have made entirely with your own labor? |
40077 | What is the difference between the consumption of wealth and its destruction? |
40077 | What is the difference between these definitions: wages is the share of labor; wages is the payment by one man to another for his services? |
40077 | What is the difference in utility between the water in a solid mountain reservoir and the same water when it is flooding the valley? |
40077 | What is the difference to the employer between rent, interest, and wages as items of cost? |
40077 | What is the difference to the workman whether he becomes more efficient or works with a better machine? |
40077 | What is the difficulty in the definition: Rent is the payment for the original and indestructible powers of the soil? |
40077 | What is the effect of free common schools on the comparative wages of skilled and of unskilled laborers? |
40077 | What is the effect of private property on saving? |
40077 | What is the effect on wages of differences in the danger, pleasurableness, social distinction, expense of preparation, of occupation? |
40077 | What is the extent of the influence one nation can have on the ratio of the two precious metals? |
40077 | What is the fact about this temptation in America? |
40077 | What is the form of contract used in the renting of farms, business buildings, and residences, in the community where you live? |
40077 | What is the function of a clearing- house? |
40077 | What is the largest manufacturing establishment in your home town? |
40077 | What is the market in which it is sold? |
40077 | What is the meaning of the phrase,"a capitalistic age"? |
40077 | What is the money market? |
40077 | What is the public sentiment in your home community as to the ownership of industries by the town or city? |
40077 | What is the relative importance of organization in sawing wood, building houses, running a small store, or a large factory? |
40077 | What is the value of its franchise? |
40077 | What keeps any of it there? |
40077 | What kinds of labor found employment as a result of its invention? |
40077 | What kinds of laborers were thrown out of employment by the invention of the type- writer? |
40077 | What kinds of municipal industries have you seen in operation? |
40077 | What large trusts have recently been formed? |
40077 | What legal rights do the builders of a railroad have that are not enjoyed by all citizens? |
40077 | What limits the number of wild rabbits? |
40077 | What makes the difference? |
40077 | What methods are adopted to keep up the efficiency of factories? |
40077 | What moral agencies increase the efficiency of labor? |
40077 | What other influences affect population? |
40077 | What other than the rents it will afford? |
40077 | What physical reasons account for the greatness of ancient Egypt, of Venice, of Holland, of England, of the United States? |
40077 | What practical or social justification is there for passing and continuing such law? |
40077 | What reasons are given in justification of laws closing barbershops on Sundays? |
40077 | What reasons are there for and against this? |
40077 | What relation has improved transportation and other means of communication to trusts? |
40077 | What relation is there between population and mountains, temperature and water- supply? |
40077 | What relation is there between the rate of interest and the price of land bearing a given rental? |
40077 | What remedy has the foreman for an inefficient laborer working under the time- wage system? |
40077 | What things beside land are rented? |
40077 | What to the public? |
40077 | What troubles arise from city politics? |
40077 | What would be some of the first effects on production if interest on money loans fell to one half its present rate? |
40077 | What would be the chief differences between your use of it now and at the age of five or the age of twelve? |
40077 | What would be the effect of technical and industrial schools on the wages of artisans? |
40077 | What would be the effect on interest, land rent, and wages of a great increase of national saving? |
40077 | What would be the effect on wages, interest, and land rent of a sudden addition of rich land to the country? |
40077 | What would be the effect upon the rate of interest in a new state if it passed a law preventing the collection of loans by outside lenders? |
40077 | What would cause it to change? |
40077 | What, then, as to the size and aggregate amount of the profits? |
40077 | When a man says he has a certain capital invested in his business, does he mean to include the value of the land and buildings? |
40077 | When did one ever see a basket of peaches that were all of the same size, ripeness, color, flavor, and perfection? |
40077 | When does an industrious man stop working on his own farm, and why? |
40077 | When gold comes out of the mine is the gain to the community greater or less than when the same value of grain is harvested? |
40077 | When goods are exchanged for money or money for goods, what is the gain? |
40077 | When he began to work at one thing, why did he ever stop to work at another? |
40077 | When interest falls to 4%? |
40077 | When is a man poor? |
40077 | When prices fall, what determines which factories shall close, and which workmen shall be discharged? |
40077 | Where among the four preceding heads would you classify it? |
40077 | Where are they? |
40077 | Where is the simplest aspect of the problem to be found? |
40077 | Where land is plentiful, why do not men cultivate two acres instead of one? |
40077 | Where two or more things are indispensable to a product, how much shall be credited to each? |
40077 | Which is the base from which the other is derived by multiplying at the rate expressing their ratio? |
40077 | Which is the more important for the rate of interest, the amount of money in the banks or the amount of goods in the country? |
40077 | Which of them are most satisfactory in your judgment? |
40077 | Which the least so? |
40077 | Which wins the battle: the general, the soldiers, or the armament? |
40077 | Which would you prefer, to clerk in a store at$ 1.50 a day, or to lay masonry at$ 2? |
40077 | Who are the buyers and sellers, and what do they buy and sell? |
40077 | Who can tell how far the exceptional money rewards have inspired to the highest cultivation of great genius and of many minor talents? |
40077 | Who has the risk? |
40077 | Whose sacrifice? |
40077 | Why are trusts or selling agreements formed? |
40077 | Why did Crusoe work at all? |
40077 | Why did people go to Dakota and Iowa when there was still room in New England? |
40077 | Why do men cultivate two acres instead of one? |
40077 | Why do some businesses give increasing returns as they grow? |
40077 | Why do the owners exact payment for the use of goods, and why are they allowed by their fellows to do so? |
40077 | Why do you value money? |
40077 | Why does a horse like hay and a man prefer meat? |
40077 | Why does a merchant engage in one business rather than in another? |
40077 | Why does nearly all the gold produced in California leave the state? |
40077 | Why does the public consent to grant patents or public franchises? |
40077 | Why does the question of the control of the railways in the interest of the public present especial difficulties in America? |
40077 | Why has interest been about 10% in the West, 7% in the Central States, 5% in New York, 4% in Germany? |
40077 | Why has machinery changed the relations of workman to master? |
40077 | Why in the case of a waterfall and not in the case of the water- wheel? |
40077 | Why in the case of the field and not in the case of the trees in the field? |
40077 | Why is exchange profitable if it is fair? |
40077 | Why is gold ever shipped from California to New York? |
40077 | Why is the variety of occupations greater or less than formerly? |
40077 | Why is transportation a greater problem in the United States than in Europe? |
40077 | Why may the railway exercise the sovereign power of government and invade other private property rights? |
40077 | Why not build a fifty- story one? |
40077 | Why not raise seals in California and fruit in Alaska? |
40077 | Why put up a twenty- story building? |
40077 | Why should preachers get half- fare rates? |
40077 | Why should the use of a machine that never can be a direct cause of gratification, have a value that men will pay for? |
40077 | Why should we say that the principle applies to land and not to cases of other industrial agents? |
40077 | Why this contradiction? |
40077 | Why will railroads issue commutation tickets? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Why? |
40077 | Will a day''s work of a common laborer buy more to- day than it would a half century ago? |
40077 | Will additional hours of labor yield more gratification than idleness yields? |
40077 | Will he read a book or play billiards? |
40077 | Will he read a yellow journal or a pink or a white one? |
40077 | Will you save more or less if the rate of interest falls? |
40077 | With a given number of workers, what may be causes of differences in the labor- supply? |
40077 | With increasing division of labor is there greater or less opportunity for the payment of laborers according to the piece- wage plan? |
40077 | Would a nation be poorer if, like Sparta, it prohibited all money? |
40077 | Would a number of smaller establishments of the same sort and with the same aggregate capacity succeed as well? |
40077 | Would any rule be attainable? |
40077 | Would doubling all commodities affect their exchange value? |
40077 | Would it be a good thing if the boot- black got a dollar a shine? |
40077 | Would it be good or bad for the whole class of laborers? |
40077 | Would jewelers make better ones? |
40077 | Would men work better if they ate more? |
40077 | Would you prefer to begin your business career with a large company or with a small merchant? |
40077 | Would you say that differences in ability at manual trades are due to practice or to native talent? |
40077 | [ Sidenote: Need of social regulation] Why not leave such subjects to individuals? |
40077 | [ Sidenote: Reward and enterprise] Are the rewards of the successful enterpriser greater than he deserves? |
40077 | [ Sidenote: The ideal of social service] Does the world owe each man a living? |
40077 | [ Sidenote: Value of labor derived from its products] But in what sense is even this part attributable? |
40077 | [ Sidenote:"What is a dollar?"] |
40077 | _ Some profits are the result of pure chance or luck._ What is luck? |
40077 | and a good question to ask in beginning the study of money is,"What is a dollar?" |
40077 | and, next, What is the relation of these goods to the personal incomes of the members of society? |
40077 | but,"How will it affect the general interests?" |
40077 | in the United States? |
40077 | with surmises, and"When?" |
360 | But, finally, do you not understand that, by the rules of modern warfare, the capital of a country is always the objective point of its assailants? 360 But,"it will be said,"suppose there are some people who wish to perform only half of their task?"... |
360 | Can equality, by the right of succession, be preserved between citizens, as well as between cousins and brothers? 360 Do you answer me with a few regiments?" |
360 | How can I pay you, when I can get no work? |
360 | If nobody were rich, who would employ the poor? |
360 | In good season...[ when?] |
360 | Let them be offered for sale....Why offered for sale? |
360 | No,reply the proprietors;"but what has that to do with the right of property?" |
360 | Thereby it asked, in less general terms, what was the cause of the social evil, and what was its remedy? 360 To sum up all these ideas in one inclusive question: What is the principle of heredity? |
360 | Whether the Treaties of 1815 have ceased to exist? 360 Who is the liar,--the accused or the accuser?" |
360 | Why should I not confess it, gentlemen? 360 Why,"say the authors,"should not the work of genius pass in like manner to the heirs of the man of genius?" |
360 | --"A constitutionalist?" |
360 | --"What are you, then?" |
360 | --"You are then an aristocrat?" |
360 | --"You want a mixed government?" |
360 | About what do our Chambers deliberate? |
360 | Again, shall the privilege of the author extend to irreligious and immoral works, calculated only to corrupt the heart, and obscure the understanding? |
360 | Am I right in saying that Proudhon''s correspondence, always substantial, will one day be the most accessible and attractive portion of his works?" |
360 | And can force, in default of reason, alone introduce them into our laws? |
360 | And if goods are property, why should not the proprietors be kings, and despotic kings-- kings in proportion to their_ facultes bonitaires_? |
360 | And if the laborer, instead of consuming his entire wages, chooses to economize,--who dare question his right to do so?" |
360 | And upon what will the tax be levied? |
360 | And what established Sunday, if not religion? |
360 | And what is human omnipotence?] |
360 | And what is my object in pleading against property, if not to obtain possession? |
360 | And when the better part of their products are consumed by others at the play, do you assure me that their families are not in want? |
360 | And why should it be set aside? |
360 | And why this undivided ownership? |
360 | And why? |
360 | And why? |
360 | And why? |
360 | And why? |
360 | And why? |
360 | And would the impossibility of demanding increase, of taxing another''s labor, be a source of quarrels and law- suits? |
360 | And you think that just? |
360 | And you, reader; what do you think of the retort? |
360 | And, developing the question, I ask,-- Did the legislator, in introducing into the Republic the principle of property, weigh all the consequences? |
360 | And, if that is not just, is it not proper to refuse literary property to every author holding public offices, and receiving pensions or sinecures? |
360 | And,"If nobody were poor, who would labor for the rich?" |
360 | Are Achilles and Ajax associated, or are they not? |
360 | Are fathers unnatural, and children prodigal? |
360 | Are not these very simple truths? |
360 | Are we really guilty of chaffering with an artist like Mademoiselle Rachel? |
360 | Are you a materialist? |
360 | Are you rich, that you may pay for courtiers? |
360 | At every moment of his life, the member of society is in debt; he dies with the debt unpaid:--how is it possible for him to accumulate? |
360 | At what point is the nation justified in repudiating the budget, the tenant his farm- rent, and the manufacturer the interest on his capital? |
360 | Be these agents five, ten, one hundred, or a thousand, of what consequence is the number; and what matters the name? |
360 | Besides, must not justice be done and our education be finished? |
360 | But am I also bound to share with him my provisions? |
360 | But by whom will Z be paid for the loss caused him by the profit charged by A in the beginning? |
360 | But every industry needs-- they will add-- leaders, instructors, superintendents,& c. Will these be engaged in the general task? |
360 | But granting that he has plenty of capital, of what use would it be to him if the extent of the land which he cultivates always remained the same? |
360 | But had the city the right to surrender them? |
360 | But has it reached its last phase? |
360 | But he who lends his services,--what is his basis of cultivation? |
360 | But how came the people, whose voice, they tell us, is the voice of God, and whose conscience is infallible,--how came the people to err? |
360 | But how is it to be determined? |
360 | But if this indemnity is refused me, what do I, a proletaire, care for the tranquillity and security of the rich? |
360 | But in what consists this preference? |
360 | But in what thing? |
360 | But of what values? |
360 | But property on what condition? |
360 | But this law itself, on what did it bear?--what was its principle?--what was the philosophy of the councils and popes with reference to this matter? |
360 | But this principle, right in its purpose, but misunderstood: this principle, as old as humanity, what is it? |
360 | But this rule of moral practice is unscientific: what have I a right to wish that others should do or not do to me? |
360 | But under what general concept, in what category of the understanding, is justice placed? |
360 | But what am I saying? |
360 | But what does this antiquity show? |
360 | But what is a pauper? |
360 | But what is equality before the law? |
360 | But what is sovereignty? |
360 | But what is the object of the war? |
360 | But what is there in common between these rude outlines of instinctive organization and the true social science? |
360 | But what is there in man older and deeper than the religious sentiment? |
360 | But what relation exists between my natural and inalienable right of property and the hunger from which ten million wretched people are suffering? |
360 | But what was monarchy? |
360 | But what will be said when I show, as I soon shall, that this same jurisprudence continually tries to base property upon equality? |
360 | But why are these earnest reformers continually bowing to power and wealth,--that is, to all that is anti- reformatory? |
360 | But why did not this ideologist perceive that man is not proprietor even of his own faculties? |
360 | But why has the civil law-- which ought to be the written expression of justice-- authorized this monopoly? |
360 | But why is it that property is variable, and, unlike obligation, incapable of definition and settlement? |
360 | But why is the right of profit confined to the manufacturer? |
360 | But why look to M. Lamennais for a steadfastness of opinion, which he himself repudiates? |
360 | But why need I go farther? |
360 | But why regard it as a crime, if they are sincere? |
360 | But why should the rich pay more than the poor? |
360 | But will the total product be increased? |
360 | But you, bonhomme Jacques? |
360 | But, do you ask, what assures me that that which I utter is true? |
360 | But, faint- hearted soul, is that a cause for despondency? |
360 | But, indeed, what guide did the law follow in creating the domain of property? |
360 | But, then, what becomes of the privileges of authors and artists? |
360 | But, what am I saying? |
360 | But, what do I say? |
360 | But, when stating these excellent arguments, did you ask yourself, sir, whither would tend such a transformation of our system of mortgages?... |
360 | By what conditions is production effected? |
360 | By what process has farm- rent been thus changed into a poll- tax? |
360 | By whom will Z be paid? |
360 | C, D,& c., or Z? |
360 | Can I, in a theatre, occupy at the same time one place in the pit, another in the boxes, and a third in the gallery? |
360 | Can he bring a suit against him to recover his business and property? |
360 | Can it be religion? |
360 | Can the expertness of a hunter ever be regarded as a property- title to a game- forest? |
360 | Can the proprietor D get any redress from the proprietor C? |
360 | Capacities are to each other as functions and persons; who would dare to classify them in ranks? |
360 | Certainly not; for on such conditions the tenant, though producing no more than before, would soon be obliged to labor for nothing,--what do I say? |
360 | Could any thing be more contradictory? |
360 | Could any thing worse be said of property? |
360 | Curtail consumption they cannot-- how can they curtail necessity? |
360 | Did he know the law of the possible? |
360 | Did he-- by the efficacious virtue of the right of property, by this MORAL QUALITY infused into the soil-- endow it with vigor and fertility? |
360 | Did not Adam Smith find, in the principle of equality, the first of all the laws which govern wages? |
360 | Did the philanthropy of the Visigoths make its first appearance before or after the preaching of the Gospel? |
360 | Did the proprietor? |
360 | Did they impose on each industry a proportional tax, so as to preserve a balance in the market? |
360 | Did they leave these two industries to themselves? |
360 | Did they suppress the beet- root by granting an indemnity to the manufacturer? |
360 | Do we doubt these things to- day? |
360 | Do we eulogize the man who first perceives the dawn? |
360 | Do we need such high- sounding terms, such sonorous phrases, to say such simple things? |
360 | Do we not know that man is frail and fickle, that his heart is full of delusions, and that his lips are a distillery of falsehood? |
360 | Do you believe that the authorities are friendly to us? |
360 | Do you deny that this property is legitimate? |
360 | Do you give the name of method to an alphabetical, chronological, analogical, or merely nominal classification of subjects? |
360 | Do you not know that domain over the soil, like that over air and light, can not be lost by prescription? |
360 | Do you not know( great philosophers have said so) that in points of practical morality universal error is a contradiction? |
360 | Do you not see that society is dissolving, that a spirit of infatuation is carrying us away? |
360 | Do you remember it? |
360 | Do you take for philosophy this twaddle, this intolerable pettifoggery adorned with a few scholastic trimmings? |
360 | Do you think it surprising, sir, that, among them all, I was for a short time a Fourierist? |
360 | Do you think that one can be a robber without knowing it, without wishing it, without suspecting it? |
360 | Do you wish the people to cry:''THE KING AND THE FRENCH NATION''? |
360 | Do you wish to know the regulator of a society? |
360 | Does each laborer receive all that is due him, and only that which is due him? |
360 | Does it follow that the preferences of love and friendship are unjust? |
360 | Does not M. Guizot say that France needs to be defended within as well as without? |
360 | Does that mean that all men have a right to all property? |
360 | Does the man of large income appreciate more keenly than the poor man national festivities, clean streets, and beautiful monuments? |
360 | Does the skill of the fisherman, who on the same coast can catch more fish than his fellows, make him proprietor of the fishing- grounds? |
360 | Either wicked or foolish, how can we recognize his authority? |
360 | Equality is eliminated by the Rennes professor; why? |
360 | Eternity precedes us, eternity follows us: between two infinites, of what account is one poor mortal that the century should inquire about him? |
360 | Even were the nation proprietor, can the generation of to- day dispossess the generation of to- morrow? |
360 | Except in the case of a clandestine reprint, how will he distinguish forgery from quotation, imitation, plagiarism, or even coincidence? |
360 | Finally, did they prefer to cultivate the two varieties of sugar at the nation''s expense, just as different varieties of tobacco are cultivated? |
360 | Finally, shall plagiarism be classed with forgery? |
360 | For of what use would this precaution be, if there were nothing to gain by it? |
360 | For what is maintenance? |
360 | For what is there more prompt, more unexpected, more abbreviatory of space and time, than the maturity of an obligation? |
360 | For whom, then, is it intended? |
360 | From whom does he borrow? |
360 | From whom does the Theatre- Francais take this money? |
360 | GOD GAVE THE EARTH TO THE HUMAN RACE: why then have I received none? |
360 | Grotius rushes into history; but what kind of reasoning is that which seeks the origin of a right, said to be natural, elsewhere than in Nature? |
360 | Has C, a hatter, the right to force D, his neighbor and also a hatter, to close his shop, and cease his business? |
360 | Has he not been appointed Fourier''s vicar on earth and pope of a Church which, unfortunately for its apostles, will never be of this world? |
360 | Has he not said,"The mind has no law; that which I believe to- day, I did not believe yesterday; I do not know that I shall believe it to- morrow"? |
360 | Has he ploughed, sowed, reaped, mowed, winnowed, weeded? |
360 | Has labor, once so fecund, likewise become sterile? |
360 | Has the latter a right to prevent D from selling? |
360 | Has, then, the translator of"L''Imitation"forgotten that he who offends charity can not honor virtue? |
360 | Have you a sumptuous table, a dashing wife, and gold to scatter, in order to attract them to your suite? |
360 | Have you the glory, honors, credit, which would render your acquaintance pleasing to their vanity and pride? |
360 | Have you watched his tricks, his turns, his evasions, his distinctions, his equivocations? |
360 | How and why could it be mistaken? |
360 | How came he to abandon it? |
360 | How can a right to the land be based upon a difference in the quality of the land? |
360 | How can it be a science? |
360 | How can its error, being universal, be capable of correction? |
360 | How can two economists look each other in the face without laughing? |
360 | How can varieties of soil engender a principle of legislation and politics? |
360 | How could these men, who never had the faintest idea of statistics, valuation, or political economy, furnish us with principles of legislation? |
360 | How could you sustain a siege, when you weep over the absence of an actress? |
360 | How dare they insult metaphysicians and psychologists? |
360 | How do we measure the value of land? |
360 | How do you expect me to distinguish you in space in the midst of this multitude?" |
360 | How does he demonstrate it? |
360 | How does the law dare to presume that the proprietor, who preserves by intent alone, intended to abandon that which he has allowed to be prescribed? |
360 | How far may the idler take advantage of the laborer? |
360 | How happens it that to- day I am obliged to defend my intentions, when my conduct bears the evident impress of such lofty morality? |
360 | How happens it that, when seeking liberty and equality, they fell back into privilege and slavery? |
360 | How is it that justice and isolation always accompany each other? |
360 | How long since utility became a principle of law? |
360 | How many nails is a pair of shoes worth? |
360 | How many small proprietors and manufacturers have not been ruined by large ones through chicanery, law- suits, and competition? |
360 | How many supporters do you think, sir, can be claimed for the project of the conversion of the public funds? |
360 | How much does he lack of being a God? |
360 | How much does the proprietor increase the utility of his tenant''s products? |
360 | How shall we pay the day''s labor of a Cormenin or a Lamennais?" |
360 | How will the bourgeoisie aristocracy end? |
360 | How, in a thinking age, can they fail to see that the world must be converted by DEMONSTRATION, not by myths and allegories? |
360 | How, on{sic} such a doctrine, condemn lending at interest? |
360 | How, then, can it force open the hands of its creditors, who have confidence in it, and then talk to them of public order and security of property? |
360 | How, you have said in your journal,--how can we"dream of a level which, being unnatural, is therefore unjust? |
360 | However that may be, can men legitimate property by mutual consent? |
360 | However, what did I do in this essay which I voluntarily submitted to the Academy of Moral Sciences? |
360 | Humanity believes that God is; but, in believing in God, what does it believe? |
360 | I ask how prescription could take effect where a contrary title and possession already existed? |
360 | I ask what this pretended revolution has revolutionized? |
360 | I ask, then, in the first place, how possession can become property by the lapse of time? |
360 | I contend that neither labor, nor occupation, nor law, can create property; that it is an effect without a cause: am I censurable? |
360 | I have delayed the reprint of the work entitled"What is Property?" |
360 | I maintain that the element of time must be considered also; for if the first occupants have occupied every thing, what are the new comers to do? |
360 | I only ask by what standard judges, called upon to decide a suit for possession, fix the interest? |
360 | I would ask Malthus why successful labor should entitle the idle to a portion of the products? |
360 | If I were asked to answer the following question: WHAT IS SLAVERY? |
360 | If all our institutions are based upon an error in calculation, does it not follow that these institutions are so many shams? |
360 | If he did not know it, what must be thought of his wisdom? |
360 | If he knew it, why is it not in the Code? |
360 | If he received aid, what right had he to use that aid to the disadvantage of his benefactors,& c.? |
360 | If he was rich, let him account for his wealth; if he was poor, how could he incur so large an expense? |
360 | If our charters and our codes are based upon an absurd hypothesis, what is taught in the law- schools? |
360 | If society is binding on the boat, is it also binding on the provisions? |
360 | If the cultivator ceased to be a tenant, would the land be worse cared for? |
360 | If the equality of shares was an original right, why is the inequality of conditions a posthumous right? |
360 | If the legislator did know the law of the possible, and disregarded it, what must be thought of his justice? |
360 | If these are not social acts, what are they? |
360 | If they have perceived it, why have they neglected to condemn it? |
360 | If this development is equal, how is the power of reproduction lessened? |
360 | If, then, after a certain length of time, the price of a piece of land has been wholly recovered, why does the purchaser continue to be proprietor? |
360 | If, then, production continues in the national workshops, how will the crisis be terminated? |
360 | If, then, the proprietor, shielding himself behind his comfort and his rights, refuses to employ the laborer, how can the laborer live? |
360 | If, then, you ask what reforms are to be introduced into the right of property? |
360 | In a word, can the principle of succession become a principle of equality? |
360 | In a word, what is God? |
360 | In case of doubt, shall it award the property to the first occupant? |
360 | In other words, What can the lord and master of a piece of land justly claim to have sacrificed in lending it to a tenant? |
360 | In other words, is it just that he who does the most should get the most? |
360 | In short, in the present conditions of labor, wages, and exchange, is no one wronged?--are the accounts well kept?--is the social balance accurate?" |
360 | In such a case, to whom will the salary belong?" |
360 | In what did it differ from Roman slavery, and whence came this difference? |
360 | Is A, the proprietor of an estate, entitled by the fact of his proprietorship to take possession of the field belonging to B. his neighbor? |
360 | Is he to be compelled to do so? |
360 | Is it Arago? |
360 | Is it Lamennais? |
360 | Is it because LIBERTY implies it, or because property prohibits it? |
360 | Is it just to compel seven or eight millions of tax- payers to pay a tax of five francs, when they should pay only three? |
360 | Is it just to reduce to misery forty- five thousand families who derive an income from their bonds of one hundred francs or less? |
360 | Is it necessary to remind this journal that it has no right to deride a dogmatic philosopher, because it is without a doctrine itself? |
360 | Is it not clear that your duty is to oppose the former to the latter, and thus, by the argument of contradiction, drive privilege into its last ditch? |
360 | Is it not true that legists are governed by caprice in giving and taking away rights? |
360 | Is it not, indeed, the height of imprudence to grant equality of political rights to men of unequal conditions? |
360 | Is it thought, for instance, that I love property?... |
360 | Is it true that my mind is only a harmony, and my soul a vortex? |
360 | Is not this a sale of the right to travel? |
360 | Is not this an instance where the words of Solomon apply,--"_L''iniquite a menti a elle- meme_"? |
360 | Is political and civil inequality just? |
360 | Is property just? |
360 | Is public order endangered more by the worthy citizen, or by the artisan and journeyman? |
360 | Is that very embarrassing? |
360 | Is the authority of man over man just? |
360 | Is the exchange an equitable one? |
360 | Is the phalanstery to be prohibited from capitalizing and lending at interest? |
360 | Is the right of succession a right of accumulation or only a right of choice? |
360 | Is the shepherd said to be just to his sheep and his dogs? |
360 | Is there any thing new in this doctrine? |
360 | It would be difficult to tell in which department of the government the expenses increase; for who can boast of any knowledge as to the budget? |
360 | Liberty is the original condition of man; to renounce liberty is to renounce the nature of man: after that, how could we perform the acts of man? |
360 | M. Troplong makes no reply; what progress is to be hoped for? |
360 | MEN ARE EQUAL BY NATURE: does that mean that they are equal in size, beauty, talents, and virtue? |
360 | Man is at war with himself: why? |
360 | May not this affectation of a false stoicism come from the same source as his recognition of the right of property? |
360 | May we hope, or not? |
360 | Michel de Bourges or Garnier- Pages?" |
360 | Must man always be wretched? |
360 | Must they devour each other? |
360 | Not being a proprietor, how can it transmit property? |
360 | Now, does it cost more to defend the rich man''s life and liberty than the poor man''s? |
360 | Now, if property is preserved by intent alone, if it can be lost only by the action of the proprietor, what can be the use of prescription? |
360 | Now, if we are equal in that which makes us men, how can the accidental distribution of secondary faculties detract from our manhood? |
360 | Now, is not this a case for the application of the principle,_ In__ pari causa possesser potior habetur_? |
360 | Now, of what do the lawyers and the publicists treat? |
360 | Now, this production, what is it? |
360 | Now, what did the proletaires wish? |
360 | Now, what have we a right to possess? |
360 | Now, what is competition? |
360 | Now, what is it to recognize a law? |
360 | Now, what is the form of procedure? |
360 | Now, what is the value of this product? |
360 | Now, what was servitude? |
360 | Now, would you like to know what uncultivated land is worth, according to the advocates of property? |
360 | Of JUSTICE, EQUITY, LIBERTY, NATURAL LAW, CIVIL LAWS,& c. But what is justice? |
360 | Of what consequence is the constancy or inconstancy of an individual to the truth which is always the same? |
360 | Of what consequence to you, reader, is my obscure individuality? |
360 | Of what did the plebeians complain? |
360 | Of what use are the patents for invention, imagination, amelioration, and improvement? |
360 | Of what use is it to invoke an ancient sibyl when a muse is on the eve of birth? |
360 | Of what use is this tax? |
360 | On the contrary, are you wedded to spiritualism? |
360 | On the other hand, the government will need capital with which to pay its workmen; now, how will this capital be obtained? |
360 | On what authority, then, do you venture to attack universal consent, and give the lie to the human race? |
360 | On what basis should it pay them? |
360 | On what ground, we ask, is the proprietor entitled to this rent? |
360 | On what plausible ground can it be maintained that a physician should be paid two, three, or a hundred times as much as a peasant? |
360 | On what, then, depended the establishment and maintenance of equality in conditions and fortunes? |
360 | One day I asked myself: Why is there so much sorrow and misery in society? |
360 | Ought society to suffer from the negligence of a few? |
360 | Ought you to feel discouraged? |
360 | Paid according to the labor that they had performed, of what could they complain? |
360 | Perfect health is better than convalescence: should the sick man, therefore, refuse to be cured? |
360 | Prescription was simply security for the future; why has the law made it a matter of privilege? |
360 | Reader, were you ever present at the examination of a criminal? |
360 | Seriously, can that be applied to a man of income, who has no other possession under the sun than the market, and in his pocket his money? |
360 | Shall the vase say to the potter,"I am that I am, and I owe you nothing"? |
360 | Shall they take a middle course, and consume five and a half while producing six and a half? |
360 | Shall we one day meet again? |
360 | Should not the actual possessor be preferred to the evicted possessor? |
360 | Should wages be governed by labor? |
360 | Should we not rather say JURISIGNORANCE? |
360 | Social sovereignty opposed to private property!--might not that be called a prophecy of equality, a republican oracle? |
360 | Soldiers of liberty, shall we desert our flag in the hour of triumph? |
360 | That may be; but are we to regard this as a compliment or a satire? |
360 | The child raised his head, eyed his questioner, and replied:''What''s that to you?'' |
360 | The expenses of seizure will be much less, it is said; but will the interest on the borrowed capital be less exorbitant? |
360 | The first memoir on property appeared in 1840, under the title,"What is Property? |
360 | The question grows simpler: what is this relative value? |
360 | The soil is then a producer of utility; and when it[ the soil?] |
360 | Then I ask whether he would still live, in case they should rob him of two- thirds,... then three- quarters? |
360 | There is, however, a difference between us two- handed bipeds and other living creatures-- what is it? |
360 | They have the right to do it, if public necessity requires it; but where is the just indemnity promised by the charter? |
360 | This being so, how can we presume to talk of the inequality of laborers? |
360 | This being so, how is it that, ever since the establishment of this balance, inequality has been on the increase? |
360 | This blame results from the facts which I call attention to: why has the Church decreed concerning things which it does not understand? |
360 | This done, what remains wherewith to pay the higher wages? |
360 | To solve the problem with one stroke, we have only to ask ourselves the following question:"Is labor a CONDITION or a STRUGGLE?" |
360 | To the second I content myself with this remark: If you wish to enjoy political equality, abolish property; otherwise, why do you complain? |
360 | To what reward does a poem like the"Iliad"entitle its author? |
360 | Under a system of equality, all economy which does not aim at subsequent reproduction or enjoyment is impossible-- why? |
360 | Undoubtedly; but what, then, is the end? |
360 | WHAT IS PROPERTY? |
360 | WHAT IS PROPERTY? |
360 | WHAT IS PROPERTY? |
360 | WILL IT BE COMMUNISM? |
360 | Was I wrong in saying, at the beginning of this chapter, that the economists are the very worst authorities in matters of legislation and philosophy? |
360 | Was it policy, we mean prudence, which induced Proudhon to screen his ideas of equality behind the Mosaic law? |
360 | Well, sir, in writing against property, have I done more than quote the language of history? |
360 | Were not the slaves, thanks to the right of sanctuary and to their poverty, the dearest proteges of religion? |
360 | What are laborers in relation to each other? |
360 | What are the RIGHTS of men with respect to each other; what is JUSTICE? |
360 | What are the consequences which immediately follow from this position? |
360 | What are the foundations of inequality? |
360 | What argument can Ricardo, MacCulloch, and Mill develop therefrom in favor of property? |
360 | What assures me, sir? |
360 | What becomes, during this progressive invasion, of independent cultivation, exclusive domain, property? |
360 | What can a writer, who professes scepticism, have in common with radical views? |
360 | What conditions were imposed upon individuals, what powers reserved to the State? |
360 | What could be more unphilosophical in a progressive philosopher? |
360 | What could they think indeed? |
360 | What did Lycurgus do? |
360 | What do we see to- day in England, in consequence of absolute property in the sources of production? |
360 | What do you say to that?" |
360 | What do you think?--what do you believe?--what do you want? |
360 | What does a judgment of the Court of Appeal amount to? |
360 | What does all that amount to in comparison with my loss? |
360 | What does that signify? |
360 | What good does it do to magnify an expression, and play with equivocations, as if we expected to change the reality thereby? |
360 | What happened in Rome, and in all the ancient nations? |
360 | What happens? |
360 | What has he to say to his readers? |
360 | What have we shown so far? |
360 | What inspired this law, destructive not only of slavery, but of property itself? |
360 | What interest could I have in flattering and praising a poor printer? |
360 | What is POLITICS? |
360 | What is a passport? |
360 | What is a piece of money, in fact? |
360 | What is democracy? |
360 | What is government? |
360 | What is it to consume as a proprietor? |
360 | What is it to cultivate? |
360 | What is it, then, to practise justice? |
360 | What is its duty? |
360 | What is its principle, its character, its formula? |
360 | What is justice without equality of fortunes? |
360 | What is justice? |
360 | What is our definition of a STATESMAN? |
360 | What is property? |
360 | What is the conscription? |
360 | What is the economical meaning of wages? |
360 | What is the ego? |
360 | What is the law of expropriation on the ground of public utility, which everybody favors, and which is even thought too lenient? |
360 | What is the meaning of JURISPRUDENCE? |
360 | What is the proprietor? |
360 | What is the right of increase when confined within just limits? |
360 | What is the right of labor? |
360 | What is the right of occupancy? |
360 | What is the right of occupancy? |
360 | What is to be the form of government in the future? |
360 | What is to be thought, I ask, of the science of government, when its professors can not understand one another''s figures? |
360 | What is, essentially, a farm- lease? |
360 | What judgment is he entitled to pass upon contemporary reformers? |
360 | What lapse of time can warrant such a conjecture; and by what right does the law punish the absence of the proprietor by depriving him of his goods? |
360 | What matters it that Achilles has a strength of four, while that of Ajax is only two? |
360 | What means this profession of faith? |
360 | What means, then, this dithyramb upon property? |
360 | What must we think of those who govern us? |
360 | What now would you have it, progressive doctor? |
360 | What occurred in the middle ages? |
360 | What principle directed it? |
360 | What reply can be made? |
360 | What rule did the legislators of''93 follow in compiling this list? |
360 | What shall I say to you?... |
360 | What shall the court do? |
360 | What signifies this exhumation of an anti- popular politician? |
360 | What sort of a right is that which is governed by numerical relations, and which an arithmetical calculation can destroy? |
360 | What sort of legislators were they? |
360 | What then? |
360 | What was feudalism? |
360 | What was its standard? |
360 | What was the cause of such degeneration? |
360 | What was the dividend of this distribution effected by Numa? |
360 | What was the immediate result of the struggle of the communes and the king against the seigniors? |
360 | What will be the result of the struggle of the proletariat and the sovereign power combined against the bourgeoisie? |
360 | What will become of them, having an instrument with which to work, but no material to work upon? |
360 | What will the poor authors do in the presence of this omnipotent union of booksellers? |
360 | What wonder, after that, that a lazy city, where no industry was carried on, became a den of avarice? |
360 | What would be the harvest of the farmer, if others did not manufacture for him barns, wagons, ploughs, clothes,& c.? |
360 | What would have been the result? |
360 | What would have happened if the first inventions,--the plough, the level, the saw,& c.,--had been appropriated? |
360 | What would you reply, indeed, to a man who should say to you,"I do not want to sacrifice myself"? |
360 | What, I ask, does this pious litany amount to? |
360 | What, I ask, has the fixed and solid nature of the earth to do with the right of appropriation? |
360 | What, indeed,--if product is to be compared with product,--are my cheeses and my beans in the presence of his"Iliad"? |
360 | What, then, are the conditions, the LAWS, of human society? |
360 | What, then, is the nation, if it is not the sovereign,--if it is not the source of the legislative power? |
360 | What, therefore, is to be done now? |
360 | What, think you, will become, in this fatal circle, of the possibility of profit,--in a word, of property? |
360 | What, were you not sure of your right, or did you hope to deceive men, and make justice an illusion? |
360 | When Lycurgus undertook to make laws for Sparta, in what condition did he find this republic? |
360 | When is property satisfied? |
360 | When may the producer say to the proprietor,"I owe you nothing more"? |
360 | When must it cease to steal? |
360 | When the tongue of an advocate once gets in motion, who can tell where it will stop? |
360 | When the"Essay on Property"fell into the reformatory camp, some asked:"Who has spoken? |
360 | When will this organ of popular interests and the electoral reform cease to hire sceptics and spread doubt? |
360 | Whence came the regulations? |
360 | Where does the right of spoliation begin, and where does it end? |
360 | Where is, I do not say the consistency, but, the honesty of this law? |
360 | Where, then, lies the solution of the social problem? |
360 | Which of us two shall sell spices to our neighbor? |
360 | Who are you, that you should question the judgment of the nations and the ages? |
360 | Who can induce it to accept this doctrine of equality, whose terrible but decisive formula the most generous minds hardly dare to acknowledge?... |
360 | Who dares maintain such a proposition? |
360 | Who denies it? |
360 | Who had the authority to introduce them? |
360 | Who has a right to sell them? |
360 | Who is entitled to the rent of the land? |
360 | Who made the land? |
360 | Who set you the tasks? |
360 | Who will explain this profound antagonism between our conscience and our will? |
360 | Who will point out the causes of this pernicious error, which has become the most sacred principle of justice and society? |
360 | Who will yield? |
360 | Who would dare to make a god of the glorious child? |
360 | Who, indeed, would venture the assertion,"I produce, by my own effort, all that I consume; I need the aid of no one else"? |
360 | Who, then, best understands the interests of property,--the State, or M. Blanqui? |
360 | Why are taxes paid? |
360 | Why did his condition improve? |
360 | Why do artists, like mechanics, find the means to live? |
360 | Why do the very persons, who laid down this principle, now refuse to be guided by it? |
360 | Why do we not preserve a like attitude towards political and philosophical questions? |
360 | Why do you talk of wages? |
360 | Why does the tenant no longer acquire through his labor the land which was formerly acquired by the labor of the proprietor? |
360 | Why has the apostle of love become an apostle of anger and revenge? |
360 | Why has the law created property? |
360 | Why has the law sanctioned this abuse of power? |
360 | Why has the social instinct, so trustworthy among the animals, erred in the case of man? |
360 | Why have I never taken part in a review? |
360 | Why have our jurists and our theologians failed, with all their shrewdness, to check the extension of the right of increase? |
360 | Why have they acknowledged the right before settling the question of origin? |
360 | Why have they always refused to interfere between the master and the workman? |
360 | Why is man, who was born for society, not yet associated? |
360 | Why is not an action to acquire possession equally conceivable with an action to be reinstated in possession? |
360 | Why is not this principle universal? |
360 | Why is society constituted in such a way that the destiny of the country depends upon the safety of the capital? |
360 | Why is the benefit of this pretended law confined to a few and denied to the mass of laborers? |
360 | Why is the proverb, THERE IS NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN, applied exclusively to metaphysical investigations? |
360 | Why is the workingman prohibited from charging a like interest for his capital, which is himself? |
360 | Why is this right, which is at bottom the right of property itself, denied to the workingman? |
360 | Why not accord to both equal property? |
360 | Why not furnish an unequivocal explanation of its object? |
360 | Why not one hundred thousand francs, two hundred thousand francs? |
360 | Why should it not be bold enough to- day to resolutely condemn capitalistic property? |
360 | Why should the Place Maubert and the Palace of the Tuileries be the palladium of France? |
360 | Why should the allies fear your doctrines, when you can not even control yourselves?... |
360 | Why should the marriageable age of the latter be fixed at eighteen years, while that of the former is postponed until thirty? |
360 | Why should the national unity be attached to a certain place, to certain functionaries, to certain bayonets? |
360 | Why should the people trust in tribunes, when kings perjure themselves? |
360 | Why should the price of a loan be governed by the skill and strength of the borrower, rather than by the utility sacrificed by the proprietor? |
360 | Why should they wish their proportion of bread, wine, meat, clothes, shelter,& c., to be doubled, if they can neither consume nor exchange them? |
360 | Why this air of suspicion of the government, unless an intrigue has been planned between the government and M. Thiers? |
360 | Why this localization of all the vital forces of France?... |
360 | Why this ridiculous mania for affirming that every thing has been said, which means that we know all about mental and moral science? |
360 | Why will he return to it? |
360 | Why, at all epochs, have the ministers of State been so reluctant to meddle with the question of wages? |
360 | Why, having wanted no detached forts seven years ago, do we want them to- day? |
360 | Why, in according possession, has it also conceded property? |
360 | Why, in case our territory be invaded and Paris besieged, can not the legislative, executive, and military powers act outside of Paris? |
360 | Why, then, are some of his children regarded as legitimate, while others are treated as bastards? |
360 | Why, then, has society recognized a right injurious to itself, where there is no producing cause? |
360 | Why, then, have they lost in laboring for you what you have gained in not laboring for them? |
360 | Why, then, is not this rule applicable to the man who improves the land, as well as to him who clears it? |
360 | Why, then, is the earth appropriated? |
360 | Will it be necessary to again take arms for their triumph? |
360 | Will it be said that all laborers should be taxed? |
360 | Will it be said, finally, that he must work harder and to better advantage? |
360 | Will it tell us, once for all, whether it is for equality or against it? |
360 | Will not the three men be found?... |
360 | Will that happy time ever return? |
360 | Would he be regarded as any the less a renegade from all parties? |
360 | Would it be more difficult, then, to reconcile possessors without masters than tenants controlled by proprietors? |
360 | Would it be possible for empty stomachs to resist such an invitation? |
360 | Would the proprietor in such a case be justified in raising the farm- rent tenfold? |
360 | Would the selfish and the cowardly ever lack reasons for yielding to the enemy? |
360 | Would you believe it? |
360 | Would you like us henceforth to take for our motto:''Let us help the King, the King will help us''? |
360 | You wish to abolish property; but could you live without a body? |
360 | You, then, who put your hands to the work, who alone truly create, why do you wish me to admit your inferiority? |
360 | [ 22] But is it possible that we are not all associated? |
360 | [ 28] But what, then, is usury? |
360 | [ 60] What is constitutional government? |
360 | [ 61] How did feudalism end? |
360 | [ Footnote 37:"What is Property?" |
360 | [ Footnote 50:{ GREEK,? n n''},--greater property. |
360 | against whom? |
360 | and what injury would they do to others? |
360 | and will she not venture-- out of respect for the right of labor-- to assure with her own hands the product which they refuse her? |
360 | are brothers enemies? |
360 | but what is there in common between the labor which duty compels you to perform, and the appropriation of things in which there is a common interest? |
360 | do you say that such should be the condition of one who sings of gods and men? |
360 | have you never made others labor? |
360 | hear some of my younger readers reply:"Why, how can you ask such a question? |
360 | how can I expect to convince you, if you can not tell robbery when I show it to you? |
360 | how did the physician''s father get his fortune? |
360 | how justify the Gospel, which expressly forbids usury? |
360 | if the husbandman forfeited his right to the land as soon as he ceased to occupy it, would he become more covetous? |
360 | no reply; what is the absolute and what the contingent, what the true and what the false, in property? |
360 | no reply; what is to be the destiny of property in case of universal association? |
360 | not a civil list? |
360 | the government itself,--who shall enlighten it? |
360 | the right of escheat over lands which one neither occupies nor cultivates,--who had authority to grant it? |
360 | theurgy, magic, and sorcery? |
360 | was he a proprietor, or only a usufructuary? |
360 | we may reply, and by what right do you demand payment from us for labor which we did not impose upon you?" |
360 | what is God? |
360 | what is inheritance? |
360 | what is the sanction of society?" |
360 | who ever inquired into the origin of the rights of liberty, security, or equality? |
360 | who pretended to have it? |
360 | why then do you speak of original occupancy? |
360 | will it be necessary for nations to put themselves under mutual surveillance for the sake of verses, statues, and elixirs? |
360 | will you never understand that disparity of wages and the right of increase are one and the same? |
360 | {--NOTE: what does this refer to? |
4543 | And how far the conveniences and comforts of life may be procured by a domestic commerce between the several parts of this kingdom? |
4543 | And how many wealthier there are in the kingdom, and what proportion they bear to the other inhabitants? |
4543 | And if not, what would follow from the supposal of such a bank? |
4543 | And if our tradesmen are beggars, whether they may not thank themselves for it? |
4543 | And if so, whether temporary slavery be not already admitted among us? |
4543 | And shall the pubic act without an end, a view, a plan? |
4543 | And therefore whether a national bank would not be a security even to private bankers? |
4543 | And what hands were employed in this manufacture? |
4543 | And what inconvenience ensued to the public upon its reduction to the present value, and whether what hath been may not be? |
4543 | And what reason can be assigned why Ireland should not reap the benefit of such public banks as well as other countries? |
4543 | And what that species is which deserves most to be encouraged? |
4543 | And whether Rome and Florence would not be poor towns without them? |
4543 | And whether Spain be not an instance of this? |
4543 | And whether a country, where it flowed in without labour, must not be wretched and dissolute like an island inhabited by buccaneers? |
4543 | And whether a fever be not sometimes a cure, but whether it be not the last cure a man would choose? |
4543 | And whether a little sense and honesty might not easily prevent all such inconveniences? |
4543 | And whether a much less quantity of cash in silver would not, in reality, enrich the nation more than a much greater in gold? |
4543 | And whether a nation of gentlemen would not be a wretched nation? |
4543 | And whether a national bank would not supply such means? |
4543 | And whether a numerous stock of people in such circumstances would? |
4543 | And whether all attempts to enrich a nation by other means, as raising the coin, stock- jobbing, and such arts are not vain? |
4543 | And whether all deviations from that object should not be carefully avoided? |
4543 | And whether all these may not be procured by domestic industry out of the four elements, without ransacking the four quarters of the globe? |
4543 | And whether all these things might not soon be provided by a domestic industry, if money were not wanting? |
4543 | And whether an academy for design might not greatly conduce to the perfecting those manufactures among us? |
4543 | And whether an uneducated gentry be not the greatest of national evils? |
4543 | And whether any man borrows but with an intent to circulate? |
4543 | And whether any more than the right comprehension of this be necessary to make all men easy with regard to its credit? |
4543 | And whether any of those things can be said of claret? |
4543 | And whether any one from this country, who sees their towns, and manufactures, and commerce, will not wonder what our senators have been doing? |
4543 | And whether any part of Christendom be in a more languishing condition than this kingdom? |
4543 | And whether any people upon earth can do more? |
4543 | And whether anything but the ruin of the State can produce a national bankruptcy? |
4543 | And whether anything but wrong conceptions of its nature can make those that wish well to either averse from it? |
4543 | And whether anything can hurt us more than such jealousy? |
4543 | And whether at this day it hath any better chance for being considerable? |
4543 | And whether both nations would not find their advantage therein? |
4543 | And whether either be sufficiently apprised of this? |
4543 | And whether even obvious truths will not sometimes bear repeating? |
4543 | And whether even the prejudices of a people ought not to be respected? |
4543 | And whether every one should not lend a helping hand? |
4543 | And whether every such Goth among us be not an enemy to the country? |
4543 | And whether flax and tillage do not naturally multiply hands, and divide land into small holdings, and well- improved? |
4543 | And whether foreign commerce, without which the one could not subsist, be so necessary for the other? |
4543 | And whether gold, silver, and paper are not tickets or counters for reckoning, recording, and transferring thereof? |
4543 | And whether he who could have everything else at his wish or will would value money? |
4543 | And whether in a little time the case would not be the same as to our bank? |
4543 | And whether industry in private persons would not be supplied, and a general circulation encouraged? |
4543 | And whether it be not a vain attempt, to project the flourishing of our Protestant gentry, exclusive of the bulk of the natives? |
4543 | And whether it be not high time for our freethinkers to turn their thoughts to the improvement of their country? |
4543 | And whether it be not madness in a poor nation to imitate a rich one? |
4543 | And whether it be not much fitter to circulate large sums, and therefore preferable to gold? |
4543 | And whether it be not our part to cultivate this love and affection all manner of ways? |
4543 | And whether it be not true that Popish nuns are maintained by Protestant contributions? |
4543 | And whether it be not true that one single bookseller in London yearly expended above four thousand pounds in that foreign commodity? |
4543 | And whether it be of great consequence to the public that it should be real rather than notional? |
4543 | And whether it be wise to neglect providing against an event which experience hath shewn us not to be impossible? |
4543 | And whether it had been otherwise possible for England to have carried on her woollen manufacture to so great perfection? |
4543 | And whether it is not possible to contrive one that may be useful also in Ireland? |
4543 | And whether it is not to be wished that the finding of employment for themselves and others were a fashionable distinction among the ladies? |
4543 | And whether it is possible a country should? |
4543 | And whether it might not be contrived so to divide the fellows, scholars, and revenues between both, as that no member should be a loser thereby? |
4543 | And whether it might not be expedient to convert thirty natives- places into twenty fellowships? |
4543 | And whether it was not declared, that such cash should not be liable to seizure on any pretext, not even on the king''s own account? |
4543 | And whether it would be wrong, if the public encouraged Popish families to become hearers, by paying their hearth- money for them? |
4543 | And whether it would not be vain to expect this from the British Colonies in America, where hands are so scarce, and labour so excessively dear? |
4543 | And whether its true and just idea be not that of a ticket, entitling to power, and fitted to record and transfer such power? |
4543 | And whether men do not import a commodity in proportion to the demand or want of it? |
4543 | And whether men would not increase their fortunes without being the better for it? |
4543 | And whether our foreign credit doth not depend on our domestic industry, and our bills on that credit? |
4543 | And whether our real defect be not a wrong way of thinking? |
4543 | And whether our women, with little time and pains, may not make more beautiful carpets than those imported from Turkey? |
4543 | And whether stock- jobbing could at first have been set on foot, without an imaginary foundation of some improvement to the stock by trade? |
4543 | And whether such abuse might not easily be prevented? |
4543 | And whether such an institution would be useless among us? |
4543 | And whether such people ought much to be pitied? |
4543 | And whether that remedy be not in our power? |
4543 | And whether that same part of France doth not at present draw from Cadiz, upwards of two hundred thousand pounds per annum? |
4543 | And whether that which increaseth the current credit of a nation may not be said to increase its stock? |
4543 | And whether the Colonies themselves ought to wish or aim at it by others? |
4543 | And whether the labouring ox should be muzzled? |
4543 | And whether the latter can expect the same protection from the Government as the former? |
4543 | And whether the most pressing wants of the majority ought not to be first consider''d? |
4543 | And whether the negroes, amidst the gold sands of Afric, are not poor and destitute? |
4543 | And whether the quantum of notes ought not to bear proportion to the pubic demand? |
4543 | And whether the true idea of money, as such, be not altogether that of a ticket or counter? |
4543 | And whether there be any knowing of this but by comparison? |
4543 | And whether there be anything like this in the bank of Amsterdam? |
4543 | And whether there be anything that makes us fall short of the Dutch in damasks, diapers, and printed linen, but our ignorance in design? |
4543 | And whether there be not many who had rather utter their complaints than redress their evils? |
4543 | And whether there is an idler occupation under the sun than to attend flocks and herds of cattle? |
4543 | And whether there should not be great premiums for encouraging our hempen trade? |
4543 | And whether there were not mints in Naples and Sicily, when those kingdoms were provinces to Spain or the house of Austria? |
4543 | And whether these will not be lessened as our demands, and these as our wants, and these as our customs or fashions? |
4543 | And whether they are not actually the greater part of the money of this kingdom? |
4543 | And whether this article alone would not employ a world of people? |
4543 | And whether this be not done by avoiding fractions and multiplying small silver? |
4543 | And whether this be not the trade with France? |
4543 | And whether this branch of the woollen manufacture be not open to us? |
4543 | And whether this doth not principally depend on the means for counting, transferring, and preserving power, that is, property of all kinds? |
4543 | And whether this holds with regard to any other medicine? |
4543 | And whether this rise may not be sufficient? |
4543 | And whether this should not be our first care; and whether, if this were once provided for, the conveniences of the rich would not soon follow? |
4543 | And whether this would not be an infallible means of drawing men and money into the kingdom? |
4543 | And whether this would not be the most practicable means for converting the natives? |
4543 | And whether this, as it is the last, so it be not the greatest improvement? |
4543 | And whether those who employ neither heads nor hands for the common benefit deserve not to be expelled like drones out of a well- governed State? |
4543 | And whether trial must not shew what this demand will be? |
4543 | And whether upon this the wealth of the great doth not depend? |
4543 | And whether we are not that people? |
4543 | And whether wealth got otherwise would not be ruinous to the public? |
4543 | And whether whatever causeth industry to flourish and circulate may not be said to increase our treasure? |
4543 | And whether whole States, as well as private persons, do not often fluctuate for want of this knowledge? |
4543 | And whether, from the same motive, every monied man throughout this kingdom would not be cashier to our national bank? |
4543 | And whether, if our peasants were accustomed to eat beef and wear shoes, they would not be more industrious? |
4543 | And whether, in common prudence or policy, any priest should be tolerated who refuseth to take it? |
4543 | And whether, in different circumstances, the same ends are not obtained by different means? |
4543 | And whether, in order to this, the first step should not be to clothe and feed our people? |
4543 | And whether, in the former case, there can possibly be any gaming or stock- jobbing? |
4543 | And whether, on the other hand, it would not be delightful to live in a country swarming, like China, with busy people? |
4543 | And yet how few are the better for such their knowledge? |
4543 | And yet whether these things are sufficiently considered by our patriots? |
4543 | And yet, if there was not, whether this would be a good argument against the use of reason in pubic affairs? |
4543 | And yet, whether all private ends are not included in the pubic? |
4543 | And yet, whether each part would not except their own foible from this public sacrifice, the squire his bottle, the lady her lace? |
4543 | And yet, whether some men may not think this foolish circumstance a very happy one? |
4543 | And, if not, whether the bankers would have cause to complain? |
4543 | And, if so, whether it be not the most safe and prudent course to have a national bank and trust the legislature? |
4543 | And, if so, whether lace, carpets, and tapestry, three considerable articles of English importation, might not find encouragement in Ireland? |
4543 | As wealth is really power, and coin a ticket conveying power, whether those tickets which are the fittest for that use ought not to be preferred? |
4543 | Be the money lodged in the bank what it will, yet whether an Act to make good deficiencies would not remove all scruples? |
4543 | But whether a punctual people do not love punctual dealers? |
4543 | But whether artificial appetites may not be infinite? |
4543 | But whether fancy is not boundless? |
4543 | But whether it be not a mighty privilege for a private person to be able to create a hundred pounds with a dash of his pen? |
4543 | But whether it be not a notorious truth that our Irish ladies are on a foot, as to dress, with those of five times their fortune in England? |
4543 | But whether money without this would be a blessing to any people? |
4543 | But whether reason and fact are not equally clear in favour of this political medicine? |
4543 | But whether the ends of money itself be not bounded? |
4543 | But whether the lazy spendthrift must not be doubly poor? |
4543 | But whether the same crown may not be often paid? |
4543 | But whether we do not divide upon trifles, and whether our parties are not a burlesque upon politics? |
4543 | But whether we have not much more reason than the people of England to be displeased at this commerce? |
4543 | But, whether a private interest be not generally supported and pursued with more zeal than a public? |
4543 | But, whether any pubic expediency could countervail a real pressure on those who are least able to bear it, tenants and debtors? |
4543 | Do not Englishmen abroad purchase beer and cider at ten times the price of wine? |
4543 | How far it may be in our own power to better our affairs, without interfering with our neighbours? |
4543 | How far the vanity of our ladies in dressing, and of our gentlemen in drinking, contributes to the general misery of the people? |
4543 | How long it will be before my countrymen find out that it is worth while to spend a penny in order to get a groat? |
4543 | How many gentlemen are there in England of a thousand pounds per annum who never drink wine in their own houses? |
4543 | How much of the necessary sustenance of our people is yearly exported for brandy? |
4543 | How vanity is maintained in other countries? |
4543 | How, why, by what means, or for what end, should it become an instrument of oppression? |
4543 | If a man is to risk his fortune, whether it be more prudent to risk it on the credit of private men, or in that of the great assembly of the nation? |
4543 | If his Majesty would be pleased to grant us a mint, whether the consequences thereof may not prove a valuable consideration to the crown? |
4543 | If there be an open sure way to thrive, without hazard to ourselves or prejudice to our neighbours, what should hinder us from putting it in practice? |
4543 | If we had a mint for coining only shillings, sixpences, and copper- money, whether the nation would not soon feel the good effects thereof? |
4543 | If we imported neither claret from France, nor fir from Norway, what the nation would save by it? |
4543 | If we suppose neither sense nor honesty in our leaders or representatives, whether we are not already undone, and so have nothing further to fear? |
4543 | In a country where the legislative body is not fit to be trusted, what security can there be for trusting any one else? |
4543 | Might we not put a hand to the plough, or the spade, although we had no foreign commerce? |
4543 | Money being a ticket which entitles to power and records the title, whether such power avails otherwise than as it is exerted into act? |
4543 | Of how great consequence therefore are fashions to the public? |
4543 | Or supposing a will to do mischief, yet how could a national bank, modelled and administered by Parliament, put it in their power? |
4543 | Or, whether that faculty be acquired by study and reflection? |
4543 | Or, whether, if the circulation be reciprocally as the quantity of coin, the nation can be a loser? |
4543 | Provided silver is multiplied, be it by raising or diminishing the value of our coin, whether the great end is not answered? |
4543 | Provided the wheels move, whether it is not the same thing, as to the effect of the machine, be this done by the force of wind, or water, or animals? |
4543 | Suppose a power in the government to hurt the pubic by means of a national bank, yet what should give them the will to do this? |
4543 | What a folly is it to build fine houses, or establish lucrative posts and large incomes, under the notion of providing for the poor? |
4543 | What advantages may not Great Britain make of a country where land and labour are so cheap? |
4543 | What effect a general compte en banc would have in the metropolis of this kingdom with one in each province subordinate thereunto? |
4543 | What foreign imports may be necessary for clothing and feeding the families of persons not worth above one hundred pounds a year? |
4543 | What harm did England sustain about three centuries ago, when silver was coined in this kingdom? |
4543 | What harm was it to Spain that her provinces of Naples and Sicily had all along mints of their own? |
4543 | What have we to fear from such a bank, which may not be as well feared without it? |
4543 | What if our other gold were raised to a par with Portugal gold, and the value of silver in general raised with regard to that of gold? |
4543 | What makes a wealthy people? |
4543 | What manufactures are there in France and Venice of gilt- leather, how cheap and how splendid a furniture? |
4543 | What must become of a people that can neither see the plainest things nor do the easiest? |
4543 | What possible handle or inclination could our having a national bank give other people to distress us? |
4543 | What quantities of paper, stockings, hats; what manufactures of wool, silk, linen, hemp, leather, wax, earthenware, brass, lead, tin,& c? |
4543 | What reasons have our neighbours in England for discouraging French wines which may not hold with respect to us also? |
4543 | What right an eldest son hath to the worst education? |
4543 | What sea- ports or foreign trade have the Swisses; and yet how warm are those people, and how well provided? |
4543 | What should tempt the pubic to defraud itself? |
4543 | What the nation gains by those who live in Ireland upon the produce of foreign Countries? |
4543 | What the word''servant''signifies in the New Testament? |
4543 | What variety and number of excellent manufactures are to be met with throughout the whole kingdom of France? |
4543 | What would be the consequence if our gentry affected to distinguish themselves by fine houses rather than fine clothes? |
4543 | What would happen if two of our banks should break at once? |
4543 | Whatever may be said for the sake of objecting, yet, whether it be not false in fact, that men would prefer a private security to a public security? |
4543 | When the root yieldeth insufficient nourishment, whether men do not top the tree to make the lower branches thrive? |
4543 | Whence also the fortunes of men must increase in denomination, though not in value; whence pride, idleness, and beggary? |
4543 | Whence it is, that our ladies are more alive, and bear age so much better than our gentlemen? |
4543 | Where this college should be situated? |
4543 | Whether England doth not really love us and wish well to us, as bone of her bone, and flesh of her flesh? |
4543 | Whether England, which hath a free trade, whatever she remits for foreign luxury with one hand, doth not with the other receive much more from abroad? |
4543 | Whether Great Britain ought not to promote the prosperity of her Colonies, by all methods consistent with her own? |
4543 | Whether Ireland alone might not raise hemp sufficient for the British navy? |
4543 | Whether Ireland be not as well qualified for such a state as any nation under the sun? |
4543 | Whether Ireland can hope to thrive if the major part of her patriots shall be found in the French interest? |
4543 | Whether London is not to be considered as the metropolis of Ireland? |
4543 | Whether Lyons, by the advantage of her midland situation and the rivers Rhone and Saone, be not a great magazine or mart for inward commerce? |
4543 | Whether Popish children bred in charity schools, when bound out in apprenticeship to Protestant masters, do generally continue Protestants? |
4543 | Whether a bank in private hands might not even overturn a government? |
4543 | Whether a bank of national credit, supported by public funds and secured by Parliament, be a chimera or impossible thing? |
4543 | Whether a combination of bankers might not do wonders, and whether bankers know their own strength? |
4543 | Whether a compte en banc or current bank bills would best answer our occasions? |
4543 | Whether a country inhabited by people well fed, clothed and lodged would not become every day more populous? |
4543 | Whether a discovery of the richest gold mine that ever was, in the heart of this kingdom, would be a real advantage to us? |
4543 | Whether a door ought not to be shut against all other methods of growing rich, save only by industry and merit? |
4543 | Whether a few mishaps to particular persons may not throw this nation into the utmost confusion? |
4543 | Whether a foreigner could imagine that one half of the people were starving, in a country which sent out such plenty of provisions? |
4543 | Whether a general good taste in a people would not greatly conduce to their thriving? |
4543 | Whether a limit should not be fixed, which no person might exceed, in taking out notes? |
4543 | Whether a nation might not be consider''d as a family? |
4543 | Whether a national bank be not the true philosopher''s stone in a State? |
4543 | Whether a national bank would not be the great means and motive for employing our poor in manufactures? |
4543 | Whether a partial raising of one species be not, in truth, wanting a premium to our bankers for importing such species? |
4543 | Whether a particular coin over- rated will not be sure to flow in upon us from other countries beside that where it is coined? |
4543 | Whether a people are to be pitied that will not sacrifice their little particular vanities to the public good? |
4543 | Whether a people can be called poor, where the common sort are well fed, clothed, and lodged? |
4543 | Whether a register or history of the idleness and industry of a people would be an useless thing? |
4543 | Whether a scheme for the welfare of this nation should not take in the whole inhabitants? |
4543 | Whether a single hint be sufficient to overcome a prejudice? |
4543 | Whether a state of servitude, wherein he should be well worked, fed, and clothed, would not be a preferment to such a fellow? |
4543 | Whether a supine security be not catching, and whether numbers running the same risk, as they lessen the caution, may not increase the danger? |
4543 | Whether a tax upon dirt would not be one way of encouraging industry? |
4543 | Whether a view of the precipice be not sufficient, or whether we must tumble headlong before we are roused? |
4543 | Whether a woman of fashion ought not to be declared a public enemy? |
4543 | Whether about fourteen years ago we had not come into a considerable share of the linen trade with Spain, and what put a stop to this? |
4543 | Whether all creditors were not empowered to demand payment in bank bills instead of specie? |
4543 | Whether all manner of means should not be employed to possess the nation in general with an aversion and contempt for idleness and all idle folk? |
4543 | Whether all men have not faculties of mind or body which may be employed for the public benefit? |
4543 | Whether all regulations of coin should not be made with a view to encourage industry, and a circulation of commerce, throughout the kingdom? |
4543 | Whether all spirituous liquors are not in truth opiates? |
4543 | Whether all sturdy beggars should not be seized and made slaves to the public for a certain term of years? |
4543 | Whether all such princes and statesmen are not greatly deceived who imagine that gold and silver, any way got, will enrich a country? |
4543 | Whether all the bills should be issued at once, or rather by degrees, that so men may be gradually accustomed and reconciled to the bank? |
4543 | Whether all things would not bear a high price? |
4543 | Whether an argument from the abuse of things, against the use of them, be conclusive? |
4543 | Whether an assembly of freethinkers, petit maitres, and smart Fellows would not make an admirable Senate? |
4543 | Whether an equal raising of all sorts of gold, silver, and copper coin can have any effect in bringing money into the kingdom? |
4543 | Whether an expense in building and improvements doth not remain at home, pass to the heir, and adorn the public? |
4543 | Whether an indifferent person, who looks into all hands, may not be a better judge of the game than a party who sees only his own? |
4543 | Whether annual inventories should not be published of the fairs throughout the kingdom, in order to judge of the growth of its commerce? |
4543 | Whether any Thing be more reasonable than that the pubic, which makes the whole profit of the bank, should engage to make good its credit? |
4543 | Whether any art or manufacture be so difficult as the making of good laws? |
4543 | Whether any besides the citizens are admitted to have compte en banc at Hamburgh? |
4543 | Whether any kingdom in Europe be so good a customer at Bordeaux as Ireland? |
4543 | Whether any man hath a right to judge, that will not be at the pains to distinguish? |
4543 | Whether any man thinks himself the poorer, because his money is in the bank? |
4543 | Whether any nation ever was in greater want of such an expedient than Ireland? |
4543 | Whether any one concerns himself about the security or funds of the banks of Venice or Amsterdam? |
4543 | Whether any people in Europe are so meanly provided with houses and furniture, in proportion to their incomes, as the men of estates in Ireland? |
4543 | Whether anything can be more ridiculous than for the north of Ireland to be jealous of a linen manufacturer in the south? |
4543 | Whether anything less than the utter subversion of those Republics can break the banks of Venice and Amsterdam? |
4543 | Whether arbitrary changing the denomination of coin be not a public cheat? |
4543 | Whether arts and vertue are not likely to thrive, where money is made a means to industry? |
4543 | Whether as credit became current, and this raised the value of land, the security must not of course rise? |
4543 | Whether as many as wish well to their country ought not to aim at increasing its momentum? |
4543 | Whether at Hamburgh the citizens have not the management of the bank, without the meddling or inspection of the Senate? |
4543 | Whether at Venice, the difference in the value of bank money above other money be not fixed at twenty per cent? |
4543 | Whether bad management may not be worse than slavery? |
4543 | Whether banking be not absolutely necessary to the pubic weal? |
4543 | Whether banks raised by private subscription would be as advantageous to the public as to the subscribers? |
4543 | Whether beside that value of money which is rated by weight, there be not also another value consisting in its aptness to circulate? |
4543 | Whether besides coined money, there be not also great quantities of ingots or bars of gold and silver lodged in this bank? |
4543 | Whether both government and people would not in the event be gainers by a national bank? |
4543 | Whether building would not peculiarly encourage all other arts in this kingdom? |
4543 | Whether business in general doth not languish among us? |
4543 | Whether by how much the less particular folk think for themselves, the public be not so much the more obliged to think for them? |
4543 | Whether by lowering the gold, or raising the silver, or partly one, partly the other? |
4543 | Whether by means of this bank the public be not mistress of a million and a half sterling? |
4543 | Whether care should not be taken to prevent an undue rise of the value of land? |
4543 | Whether catechists in the Irish tongue may not easily be procured and subsisted? |
4543 | Whether children especially should not be inured to labour betimes? |
4543 | Whether claret be not often drank rather for vanity than for health, or pleasure? |
4543 | Whether comfortable living doth not produce wants, and wants industry, and industry wealth? |
4543 | Whether commodities of all kinds do not naturally flow where there is the greatest demand? |
4543 | Whether criminals in the freest country may not forfeit their liberty, and repair the damage they have done the public by hard labour? |
4543 | Whether cunning be not one thing and good sense another? |
4543 | Whether current bank notes may not be deemed money? |
4543 | Whether customs and fashions do not supply the place of reason in the vulgar of all ranks? |
4543 | Whether divers registers of the bank notes should not be kept in different hands? |
4543 | Whether each particular person doth not pay a fee in order to be admitted to a compte en banc at Hamburgh and Amsterdam? |
4543 | Whether even a wicked will entrusted with power can be supposed to abuse it for no end? |
4543 | Whether even gold or silver, if they should lessen the industry of its inhabitants, would not be ruinous to a country? |
4543 | Whether even our private banks, though attended with such hazards as we all know them to be, are not of singular use in defect of a national bank? |
4543 | Whether every enemy to learning be not a Goth? |
4543 | Whether every kind of employment or business, as it implies more skill and exercise of the higher powers, be not more valued? |
4543 | Whether every landlord in the kingdom doth not know the cause of this? |
4543 | Whether every man doth not know, and hath not long known, that the want of a mint causeth many other wants in this kingdom? |
4543 | Whether every man who had money enough would not be a gentleman? |
4543 | Whether every plea of conscience is to be regarded? |
4543 | Whether facilitating and quickening the circulation of power to supply wants be not the promoting of wealth and industry among the lower people? |
4543 | Whether faculties are not enlarged and improved by exercise? |
4543 | Whether fashion doth not create appetites; and whether the prevailing will of a nation is not the fashion? |
4543 | Whether felons are not often spared, and therefore encouraged, by the compassion of those who should prosecute them? |
4543 | Whether five hundred and thirty millions were not converted into annuities at the royal treasury? |
4543 | Whether fools do not make fashions, and wise men follow them? |
4543 | Whether for this end any fund may not suffice, provided an Act be passed for making good deficiencies? |
4543 | Whether force be not of consequence, as it is exerted; and whether great force without great wisdom may not be a nuisance? |
4543 | Whether four pounds in small cash may not circulate and enliven an Irish market, which many four- pound pieces would permit to stagnate? |
4543 | Whether from that time, all matters relating to the bank were not transacted in the name, and by the sole authority, of the king? |
4543 | Whether frugal fashions in the upper rank, and comfortable living in the lower, be not the means to multiply inhabitants? |
4543 | Whether gold and silver be not a drug, where they do not promote industry? |
4543 | Whether gold will not cause either industry or vice to flourish? |
4543 | Whether great evils, to which other schemes are liable, may not be prevented, by excluding the managers of the bank from a share in the legislature? |
4543 | Whether he must not be a wrongheaded patriot or politician, whose ultimate view was drawing money into a country, and keeping it there? |
4543 | Whether he who is bred to a part be fitted to judge of the whole? |
4543 | Whether he who is chained in a jail or dungeon hath not, for the time, lost his liberty? |
4543 | Whether he, who only asks, asserts? |
4543 | Whether hearty food and warm clothing would not enable and encourage the lower sort to labour? |
4543 | Whether her numerous poor clergy are not very useful in missions, and of much influence with the people? |
4543 | Whether human industry can produce, from such cheap materials, a manufacture of so great value by any other art as by those of sculpture and painting? |
4543 | Whether idleness be the mother or the daughter of spleen? |
4543 | Whether if a man builds a house he doth not in the first place provide a plan which governs his work? |
4543 | Whether if all the idle hands in this kingdom were employed on hemp and flax, we might not find sufficient vent for these manufactures? |
4543 | Whether if the parents are overlooked, there can be any great hopes of success in converting the children? |
4543 | Whether immense sums are not drawn yearly into the Northern countries, for supplying the British navy with hempen manufactures? |
4543 | Whether in Hungary, for instance, a proud nobility are not subsisted with small imports from abroad? |
4543 | Whether in Italy debts are not paid, and children portioned with them, as with gold and silver? |
4543 | Whether in New England all trade and business is not as much at a stand, upon a scarcity of paper- money, as with us from the want of specie? |
4543 | Whether in all public institutions there should not be an end proposed, which is to be the rule and limit of the means? |
4543 | Whether in any foreign market, twopence advance in a kilderkin of corn could greatly affect our trade? |
4543 | Whether in buildings and gardens a great number of day- labourers do not find employment? |
4543 | Whether in every instance by which we prejudice England, we do not in a greater degree prejudice ourselves? |
4543 | Whether in every wise State the faculties of the mind are not most considered? |
4543 | Whether in fact our payments are not made by bills? |
4543 | Whether in granting toleration, we ought not to distinguish between doctrines purely religious, and such as affect the State? |
4543 | Whether in proportion as Ireland was improved and beautified by fine seats, the number of absentees would not decrease? |
4543 | Whether in public councils the sum of things, here and there, present and future, ought not to be regarded? |
4543 | Whether in such a state the inhabitants may not contrive to pass the twenty- four hours with tolerable ease and cheerfulness? |
4543 | Whether in that case the wisest government, or the best laws can avail us? |
4543 | Whether in the wastes of America a man might not possess twenty miles square of land, and yet want his dinner, or a coat to his back? |
4543 | Whether in this drooping and dispirited country, men are quite awake? |
4543 | Whether interest be not apt to bias judgment? |
4543 | Whether interest paid into the bank ought not to go on augmenting its stock? |
4543 | Whether it be not a bull to call that making an interest, whereby a man spendeth much and gaineth nothing? |
4543 | Whether it be not a sad circumstance to live among lazy beggars? |
4543 | Whether it be not a sure sign or effect of a country''s inhabitants? |
4543 | Whether it be not absolutely necessary that there must be a bank and must be a trust? |
4543 | Whether it be not agreed on all hands that our coin is on very bad foot, and calls for some present remedy? |
4543 | Whether it be not delightful to complain? |
4543 | Whether it be not easier to prevent than to remedy, and whether we should not profit by the example of others? |
4543 | Whether it be not even madness to encourage trade with a nation that takes nothing of our manufacture? |
4543 | Whether it be not evident that not gold but industry causeth a country to flourish? |
4543 | Whether it be not evidently the interest of every State, that its money should rather circulate than stagnate? |
4543 | Whether it be not folly to think an inward commerce can not enrich a State, because it doth not increase its quantity of gold and silver? |
4543 | Whether it be not in the power of any particular person at once to disappear and convey himself into foreign parts? |
4543 | Whether it be not just, that all gold should be alike rated according to its weight and fineness? |
4543 | Whether it be not much more probable that those who maketh such objections do not believe them? |
4543 | Whether it be not our true interest not to interfere with them; and, in every other case, whether it be not their true interest to befriend us? |
4543 | Whether it be not owing to custom that the fashions are agreeable? |
4543 | Whether it be not ridiculous to conceive that a project for cloathing and feeding our natives should give any umbrage to England? |
4543 | Whether it be not ridiculous to suppose a legislature should be afraid to trust itself? |
4543 | Whether it be not the industry of common people that feeds the State, and whether it be possible to keep this industry alive without small money? |
4543 | Whether it be not the interest of England that we should cultivate a domestic commerce among ourselves? |
4543 | Whether it be not the most obvious remedy for all the inconveniencies we labour under with regard to our coin? |
4543 | Whether it be not the opinion or will of the people, exciting them to industry, that truly enricheth a nation? |
4543 | Whether it be not the true interest of both nations to become one people? |
4543 | Whether it be not true, that the bank of Amsterdam never makes payments in cash? |
4543 | Whether it be not vain to think of persuading other people to see their interest, while we continue blind to our own? |
4543 | Whether it be not wonderful that with such pastures, and so many black cattle, we do not find ourselves in cheese? |
4543 | Whether it be possible for a national bank to subsist and maintain its credit under a French government? |
4543 | Whether it be possible for this country to grow rich, so long as what is made by domestic industry is spent in foreign luxury? |
4543 | Whether it be really true that such wine is best as most encourages drinking, i.e., that must be given in the largest dose to produce its effect? |
4543 | Whether it be rightly remarked by some that, as banking brings no treasure into the kingdom like trade, private wealth must sink as the bank riseth? |
4543 | Whether it be true that England makes at least one hundred thousand pounds per annum by the single article of hats sold in Spain? |
4543 | Whether it be true that in the Dutch workhouses things are so managed that a child four years old may earn its own livelihood? |
4543 | Whether it be true that men of nice palates have been imposed on, by elder wine for French claret, and by mead for palm sack? |
4543 | Whether it be true that the Dutch make ten millions of livres, every return of the flota and galleons, by their sales at the Indies and at Cadiz? |
4543 | Whether it be true that the poor in Holland have no resource but their own labour, and yet there are no beggars in their streets? |
4543 | Whether it be true that two millions are yearly expended by England in foreign lace and linen? |
4543 | Whether it be true that we import corn to the value of two hundred thousand pounds in some years? |
4543 | Whether it can be expected that private persons should have more regard to the public than the public itself? |
4543 | Whether it can be hoped that private persons will not indulge this folly, unless restrained by the public? |
4543 | Whether it can be reasonably hoped, that our state will mend, so long as property is insecure among us? |
4543 | Whether it doth not follow that above all things a gentleman''s care should be to keep his own faculties sound and entire? |
4543 | Whether it doth not much import to have a right conception of money? |
4543 | Whether it is not a great point to know what we would be at? |
4543 | Whether it is not our interest to be useful to them rather than rival them; and whether in that case we may not be sure of their good offices? |
4543 | Whether it is not to be wished that some parts of our liturgy and homilies were publicly read in the Irish language? |
4543 | Whether it is possible a State should not thrive, whereof the lower part were industrious, and the upper wise? |
4543 | Whether it is possible for this country, which hath neither mines of gold nor a free trade, to support for any time the sending out of specie? |
4543 | Whether it is possible the country should be well improved, while our beef is exported, and our labourers live upon potatoes? |
4543 | Whether it may not be as useful a lesson to consider the bad management of some as the good management of others? |
4543 | Whether it may not be expedient to appoint four counting- houses, one in each province, for converting notes into specie? |
4543 | Whether it may not be proper for a great kingdom to unite both expedients, to wit, bank notes and a compte en banc? |
4543 | Whether it may not be right to appoint censors in every parish to observe and make returns of the idle hands? |
4543 | Whether it may not be right to think, and to have it thought, that England and Ireland, prince and people, have one and the same interest? |
4543 | Whether it may not be worth while to inform ourselves in the nature of those banks? |
4543 | Whether it may not be worth while to inform ourselves of the different sorts of linen which are in request among different people? |
4543 | Whether it may not be worth while to publish the conversation of Ischomachus and his wife in Xenophon, for the use of our ladies? |
4543 | Whether it must not be ruinous for a nation to sit down to game, be it with silver or with paper? |
4543 | Whether it was not an Irish professor who first opened the public schools at Oxford? |
4543 | Whether it was not made a capital crime to forge the notes of this bank? |
4543 | Whether it was not madness in France to mint bills and actions, merely to humour the people and rob them of their cash? |
4543 | Whether it were just to insinuate that gentlemen would be against any proposal they could not turn into a job? |
4543 | Whether it were not wrong to suppose land itself to be wealth? |
4543 | Whether it would be a great hardship if every parish were obliged to find work for their poor? |
4543 | Whether it would not be a horrible thing to see our matrons make dress and play their chief concern? |
4543 | Whether it would not be a monstrous folly to import nothing but gold and silver, supposing we might do it, from every foreign part to which we trade? |
4543 | Whether it would not be a silly project in any nation to hope to grow rich by prohibiting the exportation of gold and silver? |
4543 | Whether it would not be more reasonable to mend our state than to complain of it; and how far this may be in our own power? |
4543 | Whether it would not be wise so to order our trade as to export manufactures rather than provisions, and of those such as employ most hands? |
4543 | Whether it would not render us a lazy, proud, and dastardly people? |
4543 | Whether it would not tempt foreigners to prey upon us? |
4543 | Whether it would or would not be right to appoint that the said interest be paid in notes only? |
4543 | Whether its inhabitants are not upon the wing? |
4543 | Whether jobs and tricks are not detested on all hands, but whether it be not the joint interest of prince and people to promote industry? |
4543 | Whether keeping cash at home, or sending it abroad, just as it most serves to promote industry, be not the real interest of every nation? |
4543 | Whether land may not be apt to rise on the issuing too great plenty of notes? |
4543 | Whether large farms under few hands, or small ones under many, are likely to be made most of? |
4543 | Whether mankind are not governed by Citation rather than by reason? |
4543 | Whether many that would not take away the life of a thief may not nevertheless be willing to bring him to a more adequate punishment? |
4543 | Whether means are not so far useful as they answer the end? |
4543 | Whether medicines do not recommend themselves by experience, even though their reasons be obscure? |
4543 | Whether men united by interest are not often divided by opinion; and whether such difference in opinion be not an effect of misapprehension? |
4543 | Whether men''s counsels are not the result of their knowledge and their principles? |
4543 | Whether mines of gold and silver are capable of doing this? |
4543 | Whether mismanagement, prodigal living, hazards by trade, which often affect private banks, are equally to be apprehended in a pubic one? |
4543 | Whether money be not only so far useful, as it stirreth up industry, enabling men mutually to participate the fruits of each other''s labour? |
4543 | Whether money circulated on the landlord''s own lands, and among his own tenants, doth not return into his own pocket? |
4543 | Whether money circulating be not the life of industry; and whether the want thereof doth not render a State gouty and inactive? |
4543 | Whether money could ever be wanting to the demands of industry, if we had a national bank? |
4543 | Whether money, like other things, hath not its proper use? |
4543 | Whether money, lying dead in the bank of Amsterdam, would not be as useless as in the mine? |
4543 | Whether money, more than is expedient for those purposes, be not upon the whole hurtful rather than beneficial to a State? |
4543 | Whether money, though lent out only to the rich, would not soon circulate among the poor? |
4543 | Whether much may not be expected from a biennial consultation of so many wise men about the public good? |
4543 | Whether my countrymen are not readier at finding excuses than remedies? |
4543 | Whether nastiness and beggary do not, on the contrary, extinguish all such ambition, making men listless, hopeless, and slothful? |
4543 | Whether national banks are not found useful in Venice, Holland, and Hamburg? |
4543 | Whether national wants ought not to be the rule of trade? |
4543 | Whether nations, as wise and opulent as ours, have not made sumptuary laws; and what hinders us from doing the same? |
4543 | Whether necessity is not to be hearkened to before convenience, and convenience before luxury? |
4543 | Whether nine- tenths of our foreign trade be not carried on singly to support the article of vanity? |
4543 | Whether of late years our Irish labourers do not carry on the same business in England to the great discontent of many there? |
4543 | Whether once upon a time France did not, by her linen alone, draw yearly from Spain about eight millions of livres? |
4543 | Whether one, whose end is to make his countrymen think, may not gain his end, even though they should not think as he doth? |
4543 | Whether other countries have not flourished without the woollen trade? |
4543 | Whether other methods may not be found for supplying the funds, besides the custom on things imported? |
4543 | Whether other nations who enjoy any share of freedom, and have great objects in view, be not unavoidably embarrassed and distracted by factions? |
4543 | Whether our Papists in this kingdom can complain, if they are allowed to be as much Papists as the subjects of France or of the Empire? |
4543 | Whether our circumstances do not call aloud for some present remedy? |
4543 | Whether our exports do not consist of such necessaries as other countries can not well be without? |
4543 | Whether our gentry understand or have a notion of magnificence, and whether for want thereof they do not affect very wretched distinctions? |
4543 | Whether our hankering after our woollen trade be not the true and only reason which hath created a jealousy in England towards Ireland? |
4543 | Whether our ladies might not as well endow monasteries as wear Flanders lace? |
4543 | Whether our land is not untilled? |
4543 | Whether our linen- manufacture would not find the benefit of this institution? |
4543 | Whether our men of business are not generally very grave by fifty? |
4543 | Whether our natural appetites, as well as powers, are not limited to their respective ends and uses? |
4543 | Whether our old native Irish are not the most indolent and supine people in Christendom? |
4543 | Whether our peers and gentlemen are born legislators? |
4543 | Whether our prejudices about gold and silver are not very apt to infect or misguide our judgments and reasonings about the public weal? |
4543 | Whether our taking the coin of another nation for more than it is worth be not, in reality and in event, a cheat upon ourselves? |
4543 | Whether our visible security in land could be doubted? |
4543 | Whether paper be not a valuable article of commerce? |
4543 | Whether paper doth not by its stamp and signature acquire a local value, and become as precious and as scarce as gold? |
4543 | Whether pictures and statues are not in fact so much treasure? |
4543 | Whether plaster be not warmer, as well as more secure, than deal? |
4543 | Whether plenty of all the necessaries and comforts of life be not real wealth? |
4543 | Whether power be not referred to action; and whether action doth not follow appetite or will? |
4543 | Whether power to command the industry of others be not real wealth? |
4543 | Whether private endeavours without assistance from the public are likely to advance our manufactures and commerce to any great degree? |
4543 | Whether private ends are not prosecuted with more attention and vigour than the public? |
4543 | Whether private men are not often an over- match for the public; want of weight being made up for by activity? |
4543 | Whether raising the value of a particular species will not tend to multiply such species, and to lessen others in proportion thereunto? |
4543 | Whether reasonable fashions are a greater restraint on freedom than those which are unreasonable? |
4543 | Whether reflection in the better sort might not soon remedy our evils? |
4543 | Whether silver and small money be not that which circulates the quickest, and passeth through all hands, on the road, in the market, at the shop? |
4543 | Whether sixpence twice paid be not as good as a shilling once paid? |
4543 | Whether sixteen hundred millions of livres, lent to his majesty by the company, was not a sufficient pledge to indemnify the king? |
4543 | Whether small gains be not the way to great profit? |
4543 | Whether some way might not be found for making criminals useful in public works, instead of sending them either to America, or to the other world? |
4543 | Whether such an accident would not particularly affect the bankers? |
4543 | Whether such bank should, or should not, be allowed to issue notes for money deposited therein? |
4543 | Whether such bank would not be secure? |
4543 | Whether such committee of inspectors should not be changed every two years, one- half going out, and another coming in by ballot? |
4543 | Whether such difficulty would not be a great and unmerited distress on all the tenants in the nation? |
4543 | Whether such management would not equally provide for the magnificence of the rich, and the necessities of the poor? |
4543 | Whether such men would not all set themselves to work? |
4543 | Whether such momentum be not the real stock or wealth of a State; and whether its credit be not proportional thereunto? |
4543 | Whether such unworthy surmises are not the pure effect of spleen? |
4543 | Whether temporary servitude would not be the best cure for idleness and beggary? |
4543 | Whether that city may not be said to owe her greatness to the unpromising accident of her having been in debt more than she was able to Pay? |
4543 | Whether that income might not, by this time, have gone through the whole kingdom, and erected a dozen workhouses in every county? |
4543 | Whether that measure be not the circulating of industry? |
4543 | Whether that trade should not be accounted most pernicious wherein the balance is most against us? |
4543 | Whether that which employs and exerts the force of a community deserves not to be well considered and well understood? |
4543 | Whether that which in the growth is last attained, and is the finishing perfection of a people, be not the first thing lost in their declension? |
4543 | Whether that which is an objection to everything be an objection to anything; and whether the possibility of an abuse be not of that kind? |
4543 | Whether that, which increaseth the stock of a nation be not a means of increasing its trade? |
4543 | Whether the English crown did not formerly pass with us for six shillings? |
4543 | Whether the French do not raise a trade from saffron, dyeing drugs, and the like products, which may do with us as well as with them? |
4543 | Whether the Government did not order that the notes of this bank should pass on a par with ready money in all payments of the revenue? |
4543 | Whether the North and the South have not, in truth, one and the same interest in this matter? |
4543 | Whether the Protestant colony in this kingdom can ever forget what they owe to England? |
4543 | Whether the Spaniards are not rich and lazy, and whether they have not a particular inclination and favour for the inhabitants of this island? |
4543 | Whether the Tartar progeny is not numerous in this land? |
4543 | Whether the abuse of banks and paper- money is a just objection against the use thereof? |
4543 | Whether the accompts of this bank were not balanced twice every year? |
4543 | Whether the bank of Venice be not shut up four times in the year twenty days each time? |
4543 | Whether the banks of Venice and Amsterdam are not in the hands of the public? |
4543 | Whether the best institutions may not be made subservient to bad ends? |
4543 | Whether the better this power is secured, and the more easily it is transferred, industry be not so much the more encouraged? |
4543 | Whether the book- keepers are not obliged to balance their accounts every week, and exhibit them to the controllers or directors? |
4543 | Whether the charge of making good roads and navigable rivers across the country would not be really repaid by an inward commerce? |
4543 | Whether the collected wisdom of ages and nations be not found in books, improved and applied by study? |
4543 | Whether the creating of wants be not the likeliest way to produce industry in a people? |
4543 | Whether the credit of the bank did not decline from its union with the Indian Company? |
4543 | Whether the currency of a credit so well secured would not be of great advantage to our trade and manufactures? |
4543 | Whether the current of industry and commerce be not determined by this prevailing will? |
4543 | Whether the dirt, and famine, and nakedness of the bulk of our people might not be remedied, even although we had no foreign trade? |
4543 | Whether the divided force of men, acting singly, would not be a rope of sand? |
4543 | Whether the drift and aim of every wise State should not be, to encourage industry in its members? |
4543 | Whether the effect is not to be considered more than the kind or quantity of money? |
4543 | Whether the effects lodged in the bank of Hamburgh are liable to be seized for debt or forfeiture? |
4543 | Whether the employing so much of our land under sheep be not in fact an Irish blunder? |
4543 | Whether the establishing of a national bank, if we suppose a concurrence of the government, be not very practicable? |
4543 | Whether the exceeding this measure might not produce divers bad effects, one whereof would be the loss of our silver? |
4543 | Whether the exigencies of nature are not to be answered by industry on our own soil? |
4543 | Whether the fable of Hercules and the carter ever suited any nation like this nation of Ireland? |
4543 | Whether the first beginning of expedients do not always meet with prejudices? |
4543 | Whether the force of a child, applied with art, may not produce greater effects than that of a giant? |
4543 | Whether the four elements, and man''s labour therein, be not the true source of wealth? |
4543 | Whether the general bank should not be in Dublin, and subordinate banks or compters one in each province of Munster, Ulster, and Connaught? |
4543 | Whether the general rule, of determining the profit of a commerce by its balance, doth not, like other general rules, admit of exceptions? |
4543 | Whether the governed be not too numerous for the governing part of our college? |
4543 | Whether the great and general aim of the public should not be to employ the people? |
4543 | Whether the great exactness and integrity with which this bank is managed be not the chief support of that republic? |
4543 | Whether the greater waste by wearing of small coins would not be abundantly overbalanced by their usefulness? |
4543 | Whether the greatest demand for a thing be not where it is of most use? |
4543 | Whether the ignis fatuus of fancy doth not kindle immoderate desires, and lead men into endless pursuits and wild labyrinths? |
4543 | Whether the imitating those neighbours in our fashions, to whom we bear no likeness in our circumstances, be not one cause of distress to this nation? |
4543 | Whether the increase of industry and people will not of course raise the value of land? |
4543 | Whether the industry of our people employed in foreign lands, while our own are left uncultivated, be not a great loss to the country? |
4543 | Whether the industry of the lower part of our people doth not much depend on the expense of the upper? |
4543 | Whether the interest of a part will not always be preferred to that of the whole? |
4543 | Whether the keeping of the cash, and the direction of the bank, ought not to be in different hands, and both under public control? |
4543 | Whether the lowering of our gold would not create a fever in the State? |
4543 | Whether the main point be not to multiply and employ our people? |
4543 | Whether the managers and officers of a national bank ought to be considered otherwise than as the cashiers and clerks of private banks? |
4543 | Whether the managers, officers, and cashiers should not be servants of the pubic, acting by orders and limited by rules of the legislature? |
4543 | Whether the maxim,''What is everybody''s business is nobody''s,''prevails in any country under the sun more than in Ireland? |
4543 | Whether the mistaking of the means for the end was not a fundamental error in the French councils? |
4543 | Whether the most indolent would be fond of idleness, if they regarded it as the sure road to hard labour? |
4543 | Whether the mystery of banking did not derive its original from the Italians? |
4543 | Whether the natural body can be in a state of health and vigour without a due circulation of the extremities, even? |
4543 | Whether the natural phlegm of this island needs any additional stupefier? |
4543 | Whether the new directors were not prohibited to make any more bills without an act of council? |
4543 | Whether the notes of this national bank should not be received in all payments into the exchequer? |
4543 | Whether the number and welfare of the subjects be not the true strength of the crown? |
4543 | Whether the objection from monopolies and an overgrowth of power, which are made against private banks, can possibly hold against a national one? |
4543 | Whether the objection to a pubic national bank, from want of secrecy, be not in truth an argument for it? |
4543 | Whether the original stock thereof was not six millions of livres, divided into actions of a thousand crowns each? |
4543 | Whether the police and economy of France be not governed by wise councils? |
4543 | Whether the poor, grown up and in health, need any other provision but their own industry, under public inspection? |
4543 | Whether the poor- tax in England hath lessened or increased the number of the poor? |
4543 | Whether the prejudices about gold and silver are not strong, but whether they are not still prejudices? |
4543 | Whether the profits accruing to the pubic would not be very considerable? |
4543 | Whether the prohibition of our woollen trade ought not naturally to put us on other methods which give no jealousy? |
4543 | Whether the promoting of industry should not be always in view, as the true and sole end, the rule and measure, of a national bank? |
4543 | Whether the proprietors were not to hold general assemblies twice in the year, for the regulating of their affairs? |
4543 | Whether the pubic can become bankrupt so long as the notes are issued on good security? |
4543 | Whether the pubic ends may or may not be better answered by such augmentation, than by a reduction of our coin? |
4543 | Whether the public aim in every well- govern''d State be not that each member, according to his just pretensions and industry, should have power? |
4543 | Whether the public aim ought not to be, that men''s industry should supply their present wants, and the overplus be converted into a stock of power? |
4543 | Whether the public be more interested to protect the property acquired by mere birth than that which is the Mediate fruit of learning and vertue? |
4543 | Whether the public happiness be not proposed by the legislature, and whether such happiness doth not contain that of the individuals? |
4543 | Whether the public hath not a right to employ those who can not or who will not find employment for themselves? |
4543 | Whether the public is not even on the brink of being undone by private accidents? |
4543 | Whether the public is not more benefited by a shilling that circulates than a pound that lies dead? |
4543 | Whether the public may not as well save the interest which it now pays? |
4543 | Whether the rapid and surprising success of the schemes of those who directed the French bank did not turn their brains? |
4543 | Whether the ready means to put spirit into this State, to fortify and increase its momentum, would not be a national bank, and plenty of small cash? |
4543 | Whether the real end and aim of men be not power? |
4543 | Whether the real foundation for wealth must not be laid in the numbers, the frugality, and the industry of the people? |
4543 | Whether the rise of the bank of Amsterdam was not purely casual, for the security and dispatch of payments? |
4543 | Whether the running of wool from Ireland can so effectually be prevented as by encouraging other business and manufactures among our people? |
4543 | Whether the same evils would be apprehended from paper- money under an honest and thrifty regulation? |
4543 | Whether the same may be said of any in Ireland who have even? |
4543 | Whether the same rule should not alway be observed, of lending out money or notes, only to half the value of the mortgaged land? |
4543 | Whether the secrecy of private banks be not the very thing that renders them so hazardous? |
4543 | Whether the simple getting of money, or passing it from hand to hand without industry, be an object worthy of a wise government? |
4543 | Whether the small town of Birmingham alone doth not, upon an average, circulate every week, one way or other, to the value of fifty thousand pounds? |
4543 | Whether the sole proprietor of such bank should not be the public, and the sole director the legislature? |
4543 | Whether the stock and security of such bank would not be, in truth, the national stock, or the total sum of the wealth of this kingdom? |
4543 | Whether the subject of Freethinking in religion be not exhausted? |
4543 | Whether the sum of the faculties put into act, or, in other words, the united action of a whole people, doth not constitute the momentum of a State? |
4543 | Whether the sure way to supply people with tools and materials, and to set them at work, be not a free circulation of money, whether silver or paper? |
4543 | Whether the tax on chairs or hackney coaches be not paid, rather by the country gentlemen, than the citizens of Dublin? |
4543 | Whether the terms crown, livre, pound sterling, etc., are not to be considered as exponents or denominations of such proportion? |
4543 | Whether the toys of Thiers do not employ five thousand families? |
4543 | Whether the united skill, industry, and emulation of many together on the same work be not the way to advance it? |
4543 | Whether the united stock of a nation be not the best security? |
4543 | Whether the untimely, repeated, and boundless fabrication of bills did not precipitate the ruin of this bank? |
4543 | Whether the upper part of this people are not truly English, by blood, language, religion, manners, inclination, and interest? |
4543 | Whether the use and the fashion will not soon make a manufacture? |
4543 | Whether the use or nature of money, which all men so eagerly pursue, be yet sufficiently understood or considered by all? |
4543 | Whether the value or price of things be not a compounded proportion, directly as the demand, and reciprocally as the plenty? |
4543 | Whether the vanity and luxury of a few ought to stand in competition with the interest of a nation? |
4543 | Whether the very shreds shorn from woollen cloth, which are thrown away in Ireland, do not make a beautiful tapestry in France? |
4543 | Whether the view of criminals chained in pairs and kept at hard labour would not be very edifying to the multitude? |
4543 | Whether the way be not clear and open and easy, and whether anything but the will is wanting to our legislature? |
4543 | Whether the way to make men industrious be not to let them taste the fruits of their industry? |
4543 | Whether the wealth and prosperity of our country do not hang by a hair, the probity of one banker, the caution of another, and the lives of all? |
4543 | Whether the wealth of a country will not bear proportion to the skill and industry of its inhabitants? |
4543 | Whether the wealth of the richest nations in Christendom doth not consist in paper vastly more than in gold and silver? |
4543 | Whether the whole city of Amsterdam would not have been troubled to have brought together twenty thousand pounds in one room? |
4543 | Whether the wisdom of the State should not wrestle with this hereditary disposition of our Tartars, and with a high hand introduce agriculture? |
4543 | Whether the wise state of Venice was not the first that conceived the advantage of a national bank? |
4543 | Whether there are not single market towns in England that turn more money in buying and selling than whole counties( perhaps provinces) with us? |
4543 | Whether there are not such things in Holland as bettering houses for bringing young gentlemen to order? |
4543 | Whether there are not two general ways of circulating money, to wit, play and traffic? |
4543 | Whether there be a prouder people upon earth than the noble Venetians, although they all wear plain black clothes? |
4543 | Whether there be any art sooner learned than that of making carpets? |
4543 | Whether there be any country in Christendom more capable of improvement than Ireland? |
4543 | Whether there be any difficulty in comprehending that the whole wealth of the nation is in truth the stock of a national bank? |
4543 | Whether there be any instance of a State wherein the people, living neatly and plentifully, did not aspire to wealth? |
4543 | Whether there be any nation of men governed by reason? |
4543 | Whether there be any other more easy and unenvied method of increasing the wealth of a people? |
4543 | Whether there be any people who have more leisure to cultivate the arts of peace, and study the public weal? |
4543 | Whether there be any vertue in gold or silver, other than as they set people at work, or create industry? |
4543 | Whether there be any woollen manufacture in Birmingham? |
4543 | Whether there be anything more profitable than hemp? |
4543 | Whether there be more danger of abuse in a private than in a public management? |
4543 | Whether there be not French towns subsisted merely by making pins? |
4543 | Whether there be not a certain limit, under which no sum can be entered into the bank? |
4543 | Whether there be not a measure or limit, within which gold and silver are useful, and beyond which they may be hurtful? |
4543 | Whether there be not a small town Or two in France which supply all Spain with cards? |
4543 | Whether there be not a wide difference between the profits going to augment the national stock, and being divided among private sharers? |
4543 | Whether there be not an art or skill in governing human pride, so as to render it subservient to the pubic aim? |
4543 | Whether there be not an art to puzzle plain cases as well as to explain obscure ones? |
4543 | Whether there be not every day five hundred lesser payments made for one that requires gold? |
4543 | Whether there be not every year more cash circulated at the card tables of Dublin than at all the fairs of Ireland? |
4543 | Whether there be not labour of the brains as well as of the hands, and whether the former is beneath a gentleman? |
4543 | Whether there be not less security where there are more temptations and fewer checks? |
4543 | Whether there be not two ways of growing rich, sparing and getting? |
4543 | Whether there be really among us any parents so silly, as to encourage drinking in their children? |
4543 | Whether there be upon earth any Christian or civilized people so beggarly, wretched, and destitute as the common Irish? |
4543 | Whether there can be a greater mistake in politics than to measure the wealth of the nation by its gold and silver? |
4543 | Whether there can be a greater reproach on the leading men and the patriots of a country, than that the people should want employment? |
4543 | Whether there can be a worse sign than that people should quit their country for a livelihood? |
4543 | Whether there ever was, is, or will be, an industrious nation poor, or an idle rich? |
4543 | Whether there have not been Popish recusants? |
4543 | Whether there is in truth any such treasure lying dead? |
4543 | Whether there is not a great difference between Holland and Ireland? |
4543 | Whether there is not a great number of idle fingers among the wives and daughters of our peasants? |
4543 | Whether there may not be found a people who so contrive as to be impoverished by their trade? |
4543 | Whether there should not be a constant care to keep the bills at par? |
4543 | Whether there should not be a difference between the treatment of criminals and that of other slaves? |
4543 | Whether there should not be erected, in each province, an hospital for orphans and foundlings, at the expense of old bachelors? |
4543 | Whether therefore Mississippi, South Sea, and such like schemes were not calculated for pubic ruin? |
4543 | Whether therefore it be not high time to open our eyes? |
4543 | Whether therefore such want doth not drive men into the lazy way of employing land under sheep- walk? |
4543 | Whether therefore there must not of course be money where there is a circulation of industry? |
4543 | Whether these ten or a dozen last queries may not easily be converted into heads of a bill? |
4543 | Whether they are not in effect as little trusted, have as little power, are as much limited by rules, and as liable to inspection? |
4543 | Whether they are not the Swiss that make hay and gather in the harvest throughout Alsatia? |
4543 | Whether they are yet civilized, and whether their habitations and furniture are not more sordid than those of the savage Americans? |
4543 | Whether they be not even the bane and undoing of an idle people? |
4543 | Whether they do not bring ready money as well as jewels? |
4543 | Whether they do not even indulge themselves in foreign vanities? |
4543 | Whether they may not eat, drink, play, dress, visit, sleep in good beds, sit by good fires, build, plant, raise a name, make estates, and spend them? |
4543 | Whether they will not prudently overlook the evils felt, or to be feared, on one side? |
4543 | Whether they would not subsist by the mutual participation of each other''s industry? |
4543 | Whether this acute people were not, upon a time, bankers over all Europe? |
4543 | Whether this bank be not shut up twice in the year for ten or fifteen days, during which time the accounts are balanced? |
4543 | Whether this bank was not obliged to issue only such notes as were payable at sight? |
4543 | Whether this bank was not restrained from trading either by sea or land, and from taking up money upon interest? |
4543 | Whether this be altogether their own fault? |
4543 | Whether this compte en banc hath not proved better than a mine of gold to Amsterdam? |
4543 | Whether this end should not be the well- being of the whole? |
4543 | Whether this epidemical madness should not be always before the eyes of a legislature, in the framing of a national bank? |
4543 | Whether this island hath not been anciently famous for learning? |
4543 | Whether this may be best done, by lowering some certain species of gold, or by raising others, or by joining both methods together? |
4543 | Whether this may not be prevented by the gradual and slow issuing of notes, and by frequent sales of lands? |
4543 | Whether this must not produce credit? |
4543 | Whether this offer of ready cash, instead of transfers in the bank, hath not been found to augment rather than diminish the stock thereof? |
4543 | Whether this use be not to circulate? |
4543 | Whether those effects could have happened had there been no stock- jobbing? |
4543 | Whether those hazards that in a greater degree attend private banks can be admitted as objections against a public one? |
4543 | Whether those inspectors should not, all in a body, visit twice a year, and three as often as they pleased? |
4543 | Whether those parts of the kingdom where commerce doth most abound would not be the greatest gainers by having our coin placed on a right foot? |
4543 | Whether those same manufactures which England imports from other countries may not be admitted from Ireland? |
4543 | Whether those specimens of our own manufacture, hung up in a certain public place, do not sufficiently declare such our ignorance? |
4543 | Whether those things that are subject to the most general inspection are not the least subject to abuse? |
4543 | Whether those who drink foreign liquors, and deck themselves and their families with foreign ornaments, are not so far forth to be reckoned absentees? |
4543 | Whether tiles and plaster may not supply the place of Norway fir for flooring and wainscot? |
4543 | Whether to oil the wheels of commerce be not a common benefit? |
4543 | Whether too small a proportion of money would not hurt the landed man, and too great a proportion the monied man? |
4543 | Whether trade be not then on a right foot, when foreign commodities are imported in exchange only for domestic superfluities? |
4543 | Whether trade, either foreign or domestic, be in truth any more than this commerce of industry? |
4543 | Whether upon the circulation of a national bank more land would not be tilled, more hands employed, and consequently more commodities exported? |
4543 | Whether upon the whole it may not be right to appoint a national bank? |
4543 | Whether vanity itself should not be engaged in this good work? |
4543 | Whether we are apprized, of all the uses that may be made of political arithmetic? |
4543 | Whether we are by nature a more stupid people than the Dutch? |
4543 | Whether we are not as far before other nations with respect to natural advantages, as we are behind them with respect to arts and industry? |
4543 | Whether we are not as much Englishmen as the children of old Romans, born in Britain, were still Romans? |
4543 | Whether we are not in fact the only people who may be said to starve in the midst of plenty? |
4543 | Whether we are not undone by fashions made for other people? |
4543 | Whether we can possibly be on a more precarious foot than we are already? |
4543 | Whether we can propose to thrive so long as we entertain a wrongheaded distrust of England? |
4543 | Whether we do not live in a most fertile soil and temperate climate, and yet whether our people in general do not feel great want and misery? |
4543 | Whether we had not, some years since, a manufacture of hats at Athlone, and of earthenware at Arklow, and what became of those manufactures? |
4543 | Whether we have not all the while great civil as well as natural advantages? |
4543 | Whether we have not been sufficiently admonished of this by some late events? |
4543 | Whether we have not, or may not have, all the necessary materials for building at home? |
4543 | Whether we may not hope for as much skill and honesty in a Protestant Irish Parliament as in a Popish Senate of Venice? |
4543 | Whether we may not obtain that as friends which it is in vain to hope for as rivals? |
4543 | Whether we may not with better grace sit down and complain, when we have done all that lies in our power to help ourselves? |
4543 | Whether we may not, as well as other nations, contrive employment for them? |
4543 | Whether we may not, with common industry and common honesty, undersell any nation in Europe? |
4543 | Whether we should not cast about, by all manner of means, to excite industry, and to remove whatever hinders it? |
4543 | Whether when all objections are answered it be still incumbent to answer surmises? |
4543 | Whether wilful mistakes, examples without a likeness, and general addresses to the passions are not often more successful than arguments? |
4543 | Whether without them what little business and industry there is would not stagnate? |
4543 | Whether workhouses should not be made at the least expense, with clay floors, and walls of rough stone, without plastering, ceiling, or glazing? |
4543 | Whether, although the capillary vessels are small, yet obstructions in them do not produce great chronical diseases? |
4543 | Whether, as others have supposed an Atlantis or Utopia, we also may not suppose an Hyperborean island inhabited by reasonable creatures? |
4543 | Whether, as our current domestic credit grew, industry would not grow likewise; and if industry, our manufactures; and if these, our foreign credit? |
4543 | Whether, as our exports are lessened, we ought not to lessen our imports? |
4543 | Whether, as our trade is limited, we ought not to limit our expenses; and whether this be not the natural and obvious remedy? |
4543 | Whether, besides these advantages, there be not an evident necessity for circulating credit by paper, from the defect of coin in this kingdom? |
4543 | Whether, consequently, the fine gentlemen, whose employment is only to dress, drink, and play, be not a pubic nuisance? |
4543 | Whether, for greater security, double books of compte en banc should not be kept in different places and hands? |
4543 | Whether, for instance, the German Anabaptists, Levellers, or Fifth Monarchy men would be tolerated on that pretence? |
4543 | Whether, for one who hurts his fortune by improvements, twenty do not ruin themselves by foreign luxury? |
4543 | Whether, if a reduction be thought necessary, the obvious means to prevent all hardships and injustice be not a national bank? |
4543 | Whether, if drunkenness be a necessary evil, men may not as well drink the growth of their own country? |
4543 | Whether, if human labour be the true source of wealth, it doth not follow that idleness should of all things be discouraged in a wise State? |
4543 | Whether, if money be considered as an end, the appetite thereof be not infinite? |
4543 | Whether, if our gentry used to drink mead and cider, we should not soon have those liquors in the utmost perfection and plenty? |
4543 | Whether, if our ladies drank sage or balm tea out of Irish ware, it would be an insupportable national calamity? |
4543 | Whether, if our trade with France were checked, the former of these causes could be supposed to operate at all? |
4543 | Whether, if penal laws should be thought oppressive, we may not at least be allowed to give premiums? |
4543 | Whether, if people must poison themselves, they had not better do it with their own growth? |
4543 | Whether, if the legislature destroyed the public, it would not be felo de se; and whether it be reasonable to suppose it bent on its own destruction? |
4543 | Whether, if the public thrives, all particular persons must not feel the benefit thereof, even the bankers themselves? |
4543 | Whether, if we had two colleges, there might not spring a useful emulation between them? |
4543 | Whether, if''the crown of the wise be their riches''( Prov., xiv.24), we are not the foolishest people in Christendom? |
4543 | Whether, in a short compass of time, this bank did not undergo many new changes and regulations by several successive acts of council? |
4543 | Whether, in order to make men see and feel, it be not often necessary to inculcate the same thing, and place it in different lights? |
4543 | Whether, in order to mend it, we ought not first to know the peculiar wretchedness of our state? |
4543 | Whether, in order to redress our evils, artificial helps are not most wanted in a land where industry is most against the natural grain of the people? |
4543 | Whether, in such a soil as ours, if there was industry, there could be want? |
4543 | Whether, in the above mentioned towns, it was not prohibited to make payments in silver, exceeding the sum of six hundred livres? |
4543 | Whether, nevertheless, a light and ludicrous vein be not the reigning humour; but whether there was ever greater cause to be serious? |
4543 | Whether, nevertheless, it be a crime to inquire how far we may do without foreign trade, and what would follow on such a supposition? |
4543 | Whether, nevertheless, the community of danger, which lulls private men asleep, ought not to awaken the public? |
4543 | Whether, nevertheless, the damage would be very considerable, if by degrees our money were brought back to the English value there to rest for ever? |
4543 | Whether, nevertheless, the political body, as well as the natural, must not sometimes be worse in order to be better? |
4543 | Whether, nevertheless, there is any other people whose wants may be more easily supplied from home? |
4543 | Whether, nevertheless, there should not be a particular fund for present use in answering bills and circulating credit? |
4543 | Whether, notwithstanding the cash supposed to be brought into it, any nation is, in truth, a gainer by such traffic? |
4543 | Whether, of all the helps to industry that ever were invented, there be any more secure, more easy, and more effectual than a national bank? |
4543 | Whether, the better to answer domestic circulation, it may not be right to issue notes as low as twenty shillings? |
4543 | Whether, therefore, a distinction should not be made between mere Papists and recusants? |
4543 | Whether, therefore, a legislator should be content with a vulgar share of knowledge? |
4543 | Whether, therefore, a national bank would not be more beneficial than even a mine of gold? |
4543 | Whether, therefore, bank bills should at any time be multiplied but as trade and business were also multiplied? |
4543 | Whether, therefore, it doth not very much import that they should be wisely framed? |
4543 | Whether, therefore, it may not be fatal to engraft trade on a national bank, or to propose dividends on the stock thereof? |
4543 | Whether, therefore, less money swiftly circulating, be not, in effect, equivalent to more money slowly circulating? |
4543 | Whether, therefore, when there are no such prospects, or cheats, or private schemes proposed, the same effects can be justly feared? |
4543 | Whether, though it be evident silver is wanted, it be yet so evident which is the best way of providing for this want? |
4543 | Whether, when one man had in his way procured more than he could consume, he would not exchange his superfluities to supply his wants? |
4543 | Whether, without the proper means of circulation, it be not vain to hope for thriving manufacturers and a busy people? |
4543 | Whose fault is it if poor Ireland still continues poor? |
4543 | Why the workhouse in Dublin, with so good an endowment, should yet be of so little use? |
4543 | Why we do not make tiles of our own, for flooring and roofing, rather than bring them from Holland? |
4543 | Why, if a bribe by the palate or the purse be in effect the same thing, they should not be alike infamous? |
4543 | and how far the product of not constitute a flourishing nation; our own country may suffice for the compassing of this end? |
4543 | and how this may most probably be effected? |
4543 | and whether a cunning tradesman doth not stand in his own light? |
4543 | and whether any man can fairly confute the querist? |
4543 | and whether for the honour of the nation they ought not to be removed? |
4543 | and whether risks and frauds might not be more justly apprehended from them? |
4543 | and whether stock- jobbing is not to be ranked under the former? |
4543 | and whether the latter could operate to any great degree? |
4543 | and whether this may not be owing to that very endowment? |
4543 | and whether this privileges) did not rise to near 2000 per cent must be ascribed to real advantages of trade, or to mere frenzy? |
4543 | and whether this value should not alway be rated at the same number of years''purchase as at first? |
4543 | and whether this was not the case of the Bank of St. George in Genoa? |
4543 | and whether this would not be the consequence of a nation al bank? |
4543 | and whether this would not make missionaries in the Irish tongue useful? |
4543 | and whether traders only are to be consulted about trade, or bankers about money? |
4543 | and whether, without that, there could have been of late so many sufferers? |
4543 | and, if so, whether it would be right to object against the foregoing oath, that all would take it, and none think themselves bound by it? |
4543 | not thrive, while wants are supplied, and business goes on? |
4543 | or whether there can be any security in an estate of land when the demands upon it are unknown? |
4543 | who is even persuaded, it may be meritorious to destroy the powers that are? |