The Population Debate: The Development of Conflicting Theories Up to 1900Houghton Mifflin, 1967 - 466 sider |
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Side 57
... Natural things are so ordered , to keep always that great Wheel ( i.e. , generations and corruption ) in circulation ; and therein the Accesses and Recesses of the Sun , the Influxes of the Heat thereof and of the other Heavenly Bodies ...
... Natural things are so ordered , to keep always that great Wheel ( i.e. , generations and corruption ) in circulation ; and therein the Accesses and Recesses of the Sun , the Influxes of the Heat thereof and of the other Heavenly Bodies ...
Side 224
... natural and current wages . " 90 In 1814 the Scottish economist Dawson wrote that as a nation becomes more populous and its labor force increases , the workers are forced to accept harder conditions to obtain food and land.91 On wages ...
... natural and current wages . " 90 In 1814 the Scottish economist Dawson wrote that as a nation becomes more populous and its labor force increases , the workers are forced to accept harder conditions to obtain food and land.91 On wages ...
Side 233
... natural level of wages fixed at the subsistence minimum , as was assumed in the " iron law " of wages , but rather that the natural level is sufficient to provide the workers with what habit makes necessary to them . This opinion was ...
... natural level of wages fixed at the subsistence minimum , as was assumed in the " iron law " of wages , but rather that the natural level is sufficient to provide the workers with what habit makes necessary to them . This opinion was ...
Innhold
Fluctuation in Population Thought | 1 |
Early Population Thought | 9 |
The Rise of Population Theory in the Seventeenth | 28 |
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Adam Smith advance agriculture American Anders Berch believed capital Carey chapter checks civilization classical economics consequences consumption cultivation diminishing returns distribution distribution theory DNB English doctrine economist edition effect England especially Essay factors fertility greater human Ibid improvement increase of population industry John Stuart Mill labor supply land later London Malthus Malthusian theory mankind marriage McCulloch means of subsistence mercantilist Messance misery moral multiply nation natural opinion optimistic overpopulation Paris period pessimistic Physiocrats political economy politique poor poorer popu population growth population increase population numbers population question population theory population thought poverty principle of diminishing principle of population Principles of Political profits progress proportion Ravenstone relation of population rent Ricardian rent Ricardo significance of population Simon Gray social society soils Steuart subsistence limit supply and demand Sweden Swedish tendency theory of population tion trade wage level wealth workers writers wrote