| 1838 - 556 sider
...general a less proporUonate return ; or, in other words, that though, with every increase of the labour bestowed, the aggregate return is increased, the increase...return is not in proportion to the increase of the labour.' With regard to the first of these propositions, plain as it appears, it is, as the author... | |
| William Tait, Christian Isobel Johnstone - 1850 - 766 sider
...return ; or, in othor words, that though with every increase of labour bestowed, the aggregat* return if increased, the increase of the return is not in proportion to the increase of the labour." The chapter on population is one of the most readable in the book ; it contains more of fact... | |
| William Tait, Christian Isobel Johnstone - 1850 - 818 sider
...general, a less proportionate return ; or, in other words, that though with every increase of labour bestowed, the aggregate return is increased, the increase of the return is not in proper. tiou to the increase of the labour." The chapter on population i« one of the most readable... | |
| Nassau William Senior - 1854 - 256 sider
...general a less proportionate return, or, in other words, that though, with every increase of the labour bestowed, the aggregate return is increased, the increase of the return is not in proportion to the increase_of the labour, . . . . . . .26 PAOK Development of the First Elementary Proposition, namely,... | |
| Sir George Kettilby Rickards - 1854 - 284 sider
..."additional labour employed on the land within a given district produces a less proportionate return — ie the increase of the return is not in proportion to the increase of the labour. "t In the section on population in the same work he thus speaks : — " We have already stated... | |
| sir George Kettilby Rickards - 1854 - 316 sider
..."additional labour employed on the land within a given district produces a less proportionate return — ie the increase of the return is not in proportion to the increase of the labour."! In the section on population in the same work he thus speaks : — " We have already stated... | |
| George Drysdale - 1861 - 622 sider
...wealth, may be indefinitely increased by using their products as the means of further production. "4. That, agricultural skill remaining the same, additional...is not in proportion to the increase of the labor. " The first of these propositions is a matter of consciousness, the three others are matter of observation."... | |
| George Drysdale - 1861 - 616 sider
...words, that though with every rease of the labor bestowed, the aggregate return is increased, the rease of the return is not in proportion to the increase of the labor. The first of these propositions is a matter of consciousness, the зe others are matter of observation."... | |
| George Drysdale - 1876 - 804 sider
...wealth, may be indefinitely increased by using their products as the means of further production. " 4. That, agricultural skill remaining the same, additional...is not in proportion to the increase of the labor. " The first of these propositions is a matter of consciousness, the three others are matter of observation."... | |
| Richard Theodore Ely - 1884 - 80 sider
...which any branch of knowledge may convey with it, can be known only when the science is completed. by using their products as the means of further production."...surrounding us, they substituted an enticing unity and an alluring simplicity. They appealed irresistibly to the vanity of the average man, as they provided... | |
| |