Population and Capital: ... a course of lectures delivered before the University of Oxford |
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Page 13
... necessary to have a clear perception of the fact that , whatever is employed as capital is consumed just as much as what is spent as income , only with this difference , that the one is spent many times over , and the other once for all ...
... necessary to have a clear perception of the fact that , whatever is employed as capital is consumed just as much as what is spent as income , only with this difference , that the one is spent many times over , and the other once for all ...
Page 15
... necessary for carrying on his business as heretofore . In that case , he will be driven either to retrench his business , dismissing some of the workmen whom he has disabled himself to maintain , or else to supply the loss of capital by ...
... necessary for carrying on his business as heretofore . In that case , he will be driven either to retrench his business , dismissing some of the workmen whom he has disabled himself to maintain , or else to supply the loss of capital by ...
Page 18
... necessary limitation of labour by capital , arises from the vague and inaccurate notions that prevail on the subject of credit . Credit , according to the view fondly entertained by some theorists , may be made an effectual substitute ...
... necessary limitation of labour by capital , arises from the vague and inaccurate notions that prevail on the subject of credit . Credit , according to the view fondly entertained by some theorists , may be made an effectual substitute ...
Page 23
... necessary to obviate a misapprehension to which some part of my argument may have exposed me . I have insisted on the superior advantage , as regards the increase of national wealth , of the productive employment of capital over mere ...
... necessary to obviate a misapprehension to which some part of my argument may have exposed me . I have insisted on the superior advantage , as regards the increase of national wealth , of the productive employment of capital over mere ...
Page 40
... necessary to explain and qualify the proposition of Malthus , which , in its general terms , I acknowledge to be true and most important , -- that population is limited by the means of subsistence . It will be expedient , in the first ...
... necessary to explain and qualify the proposition of Malthus , which , in its general terms , I acknowledge to be true and most important , -- that population is limited by the means of subsistence . It will be expedient , in the first ...
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Common terms and phrases
advance afford agricultural animals argument arts Author bound in morocco capital cause CHARLES MERIVALE cheaper Edition checks civilisation classes cloth consequence crease cultivation Dictionary doctrine duction earth Edinburgh Review effect employed employment England Essay evil existence fact famine Fcap fecundity GEORGE MOORE greater History human fecundity Illustrations improvement increase of population industry inhabitants instance J. S. Mill labour land Lectures less limit LONGMAN Malthus Malthusian mankind manufacturing marriage means of subsistence ment Mill millions misery moral restraint morocco multiply nations numbers observe operation period physical Plates political economy popu Post 8vo present price 21s price 58 principle of population production progress prolific proportion race ratio refer regard result revised ROBERT SOUTHEY says Second Edition social society soil species Square crown 8vo superfecundity supply suppose theory tion Vignette vols wealth whole Wood Engravings Woodcuts writers
Popular passages
Page 207 - For them no more the blazing hearth shall burn. Or busy housewife ply her evening care; No children run to lisp their sire's return, Or climb his knees the envied kiss to share.
Page 6 - Hints to Mothers on the Management of their Health during the Period of Pregnancy and in the Lying-in Room : With an Exposure of Popular Errors in connexion with those subjects, &c.
Page 14 - Thomson's Tables of Interest, at Three, Four, Four-and-a-Half, and Five per Cent., from One Pound to Ten Thousand, and from 1 to 365 Days, in a regular progression of single Days ; with Interest at all the above Rates, from One to Twelve Months, and from One to Ten Years.
Page 16 - Encyclopaedia of Domestic Economy; comprising such. subjects as are most immediately connected with Housekeeping : As, The Construction of Domestic Edifices, with the Modes of Warming, Ventilating, and Lighting them — A description of the various articles of Furniture, with the nature of their Materials — Duties of Servants— &c.
Page 7 - A General Dictionary of Geography, Descriptive, Physical, Statistical, and Historical ; forming a complete Gazetteer of the World. By A. KEITH JOHNSTON, FRSE 8vo. 31s. 6d. M'Culloch's Dictionary, Geographical, Statistical, and Historical, of the various Countries, Places, and principal Natural Objects in the World.
Page 6 - Bourne. -— A Treatise on the Steam Engine, in its Application to Mines, Mills, Steam Navigation. and Railways.
Page 55 - Necessity, that imperious all-pervading law of nature, restrains them within the prescribed bounds. The race of plants and the race of animals shrink under this great restrictive law. And the race of man cannot, by any efforts of reason, escape from it.
Page 12 - Kirby and Spence's Introduction to Entomology ; or, Elements of the Natural History of Insects : Comprising an Account of Noxious and Useful Insects, of their Metamorphoses, Food, Stratagems, Habitations, Societies, Motions, Noises, Hybernation, Instinct, &c.
Page 60 - Taking the whole earth, instead of this island, emigration would of course be excluded; and, supposing the present population equal to a thousand millions, the human species would increase as the numbers 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, and subsistence as 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. In two centuries the population would be to the means of subsistence as 256 to 9; in three centuries as 4096 to 13 and in two thousand years the difference would be almost incalculable.
Page 10 - AND DESCRIPTIONS OF THE PALEOZOIC FOSSILS of CORNWALL, DEVON, and WEST SOMERSET; observed in the course of the Ordnance Geological Survey of that District. By JOHN PHILLIPS, FRS FGS &c.