An Essay on the Principle of Population, as it Affects the Future Improvement of Society, Volum 2 |
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... HAPPINESS ; WITH AN INQUIRY INTO OUR PROSPECTS RESPECTING THE FUTURE REMOVAL OR MITIGATION OF THE EVILS WHICH IT OCCASIONS . By T. R. MALTHUS , A. M. LATE FELLOW OF JESUS COLLEGE , CAMBRIDGE . IN TWO VOLUMES . VOL . II . FIRST AMERICAN ...
... HAPPINESS ; WITH AN INQUIRY INTO OUR PROSPECTS RESPECTING THE FUTURE REMOVAL OR MITIGATION OF THE EVILS WHICH IT OCCASIONS . By T. R. MALTHUS , A. M. LATE FELLOW OF JESUS COLLEGE , CAMBRIDGE . IN TWO VOLUMES . VOL . II . FIRST AMERICAN ...
Side 72
... rice countries more populous than corn coun- tries . But their happiness does not depend either upon their being thinly or fully inhabited , upon preceding view of Society . their poverty or their riches 72 Book II . ESSAY ON.
... rice countries more populous than corn coun- tries . But their happiness does not depend either upon their being thinly or fully inhabited , upon preceding view of Society . their poverty or their riches 72 Book II . ESSAY ON.
Side 83
... happiness and population — a movement truly " retrograde ; or at least a kind of oscillation be- tween good and evil ? In societies arrived at " this term will not this oscillation be a constantly " subsisting cause of periodical misery ...
... happiness and population — a movement truly " retrograde ; or at least a kind of oscillation be- tween good and evil ? In societies arrived at " this term will not this oscillation be a constantly " subsisting cause of periodical misery ...
Side 98
... happiness and immortality , these " solemn temples " of truth and virtue , will dissolve , " like the baseless fabric of a vision , " when we awaken to real life , and contemplate the genuine situation of man on earth . 46 Mr. Godwin ...
... happiness and immortality , these " solemn temples " of truth and virtue , will dissolve , " like the baseless fabric of a vision , " when we awaken to real life , and contemplate the genuine situation of man on earth . 46 Mr. Godwin ...
Side 119
... happiness or the degree of misery , prevailing among the lower classes of people in every known state , at present chiefly depends ; and on this happiness or degree of misery depends principally the increase , stationa- riness , or ...
... happiness or the degree of misery , prevailing among the lower classes of people in every known state , at present chiefly depends ; and on this happiness or degree of misery depends principally the increase , stationa- riness , or ...
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An Essay on the Principle of Population: The Future Improvement of Society Thomas Malthus Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2016 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
agriculture appear arising average bank of England benevolence births to marriages bounty cause charity cheap soups circumstances claim of right commercial common Condorcet consequence considerable considered corn laws crease cultivation deaths degra degree demand diminish distress effect emigration encourage England evil expected exportation of corn France fruitfulness of marriages Godwin greater number habits happiness human improvement increase of population industry land laws of nature lives to marry lower classes maintenance of labor manufactures means of subsistence ment misery mode moral restraint nation necessary neral object observed parish passion plague poor laws poverty present prevailing preventive check price of corn price of labor price of provisions principle of population proportion of births puberty quantity rational expectations reason riages Robert Gourlay Russia scarcity shillings supply suppose surplus produce systems of equality take place tend tion vice wealth Wealth of Nations whole
Populære avsnitt
Side 119 - And thus it appears that a society constituted according to the most beautiful form that imagination can conceive, with benevolence for its moving principle instead of self-love, and with every evil disposition in all its members corrected by reason...
Side 315 - The period of delayed gratification would be passed in saving the earnings which were above the wants of a single man, and in acquiring habits of sobriety, industry, and economy, which would enable him in a few years to enter into the matrimonial contract without fear of its consequences.
Side 177 - ... a convenient stock of flax, hemp, wool, thread, iron, and other necessary ware and stuff to set the poor on work, and also competent sums of money for and towards the necessary relief of the lame, impotent, old, blind, and such other among them being poor and not able to work, and also...
Side 338 - In an endeavour to raise the proportion of the quantity of provisions to the number of consumers in any country, our attention would naturally be first directed to the increasing of the absolute quantity of provisions; but finding that, as fast as we did this, the number of consumers more than kept pace with it, and that with all our exertions we were still as far as ever behind, we should be convinced that our efforts directed only in this way would never succeed. It would appear to be setting the...
Side 374 - ... are easily heated to outrage. Whatever the apparent cause of any riots may be, the real one is always want of happiness. It shows that something is wrong in the system of Government that injures the felicity by which society is to be preserved.
Side 391 - Though to marry in this case is, in my opinion, clearly an immoral act, yet it is not one which society can justly take upon itself to prevent or punish ; because the punishment provided for it by the laws of nature falls directly and most severely upon the individual who commits the act, and through him, only more remotely and feebly, on the society. When nature will govern and punish for us...
Side 361 - For my own part I feel not the slightest doubt that, if the introduction of the cowpox should extirpate the small-pox, and yet the number of marriages continue the same, we shall find a very perceptible difference in the increased mortality of some other diseases.
Side 339 - We are not however to relax our efforts in increasing the quantity of provisions, but to combine another effort with it, that of keeping the population, when once it has been overtaken, at such a distance behind as to effect the relative proportion which we desire, and thus unite the two grand desiderata, a great actual population and a state of society in which abject poverty and dependence are comparatively but little known, two objects which are far from being incompatible.
Side 330 - ... abstaining from marriage till we are in a condition to support a family, with a perfectly moral conduct during that period, is the strict line of duty; and when revelation is taken into the question, this duty undoubtedly receives very powerful confirmation.
Side 239 - ... expense of the home market ; as every bushel of corn, which is exported by means of the bounty, and which would not have been exported without the bounty, would have remained in the home market to increase the consumption, and to lower the price of that commodity. The corn bounty, it is to be observed, as well as every other bounty upon exportation, imposes two different taxes upon the people ; first, the tax which they are obliged to contribute, in order to pay the bounty ; and secondly, the...