... any other quarter. No wonder, therefore, when all the qualities necessary to constitute money are possessed in so eminent a degree by the precious metals, that they have been used as such, in civilized societies, from a very remote era. " They became... Madras Journal of Literature and Science - Side 271853Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| 1901 - 744 sider
...and the peculiar qualities which they possessed. Turgot has very rightly observed " that they became money not in consequence of any arbitrary agreement...of any law, but by the nature and force of things." It was not directly with the introduction of gold and silver that coiticd money became the medium of... | |
| John Ramsay McCulloch - 1825 - 446 sider
...civilized societies, from a very remote era. " They became universal money," as M. Turgot has observed, " not in consequence of any arbitrary agreement among...of any law, but by the nature and force of things." The greatest drawback attendant on the use of gold and silver as money consists in the high value of... | |
| Thomas Hodgskin - 1827 - 318 sider
..." It has not been," says the philosophic Turgot, " in consequence of any agreement among men, or by the intervention of any law, but by the nature and force of things, that the precious metals have become universal money." It is sometimes supposed that money and wealth... | |
| Calvin Colton - 1848 - 556 sider
...that they would have been employed as money. Turgot says, " The precious metals became universally money, not in consequence of any arbitrary agreement...of any law, but by the nature and force of things." That it was "not in consequence of any arbitrary agreement," is well said, though M. Say seems to think... | |
| John Ramsay McCulloch - 1849 - 686 sider
...civilized societies, from a very remote sera. " They became universal money," as M. Turgot lias observed, " not in consequence of any arbitrary agreement among...of any law, but by the nature and force of things." When first used aa money, the precious metals were in an unfashioued state, in bars or ingots. The... | |
| Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith - 1850 - 722 sider
...formed on new principles. For the present, we quite agree with Turgot, that the precious metals became universal money, not in consequence of any arbitrary...of any law, but by the nature and force of things. We still continue to perceive and understand that, amongst not a few other considerations, it was the... | |
| Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith - 1850 - 724 sider
...formed on new principles. For the present, we quite agree with Turgot, that the precious metals became universal money, not in consequence of any arbitrary...men, or of the intervention of any law, but by the natdre and force of things. We still continue to perceive and understand that, amongst not a few other... | |
| John Ramsay McCulloch - 1852 - 882 sider
...civilised societies, from a very remote era. " They became universal money," as M. Turgot has observed, " not in consequence of any arbitrary agreement among...of any law, but by the nature and force of things." When first used as money, the precious metals were in an unfashioned state, in bars or ingots. The... | |
| Madras literary society - 1856 - 722 sider
...Qroacian invasion, and being eminently qualified for a circulating medium, became centuries ago, as Turgot has observed, " universal money not in consequence...of India as well as every where else, but at what precise period remains unknown. That the choice fell upon gold and silver arose probably from their... | |
| 1857 - 348 sider
...Groccian invasion, and beinjj eminently qualified for a circulating medium, became centuries ago, as Turgot has observed, " universal money not in consequence...of India as well as every where else, but at what precise period remains unknown. That the choice fell upon gold and silver arose probably from their... | |
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