| Benjamin Franklin - 1840 - 604 pages
...of the labor of mankind is employed in raising provisions for the mouth. Is not this kind of labor, then, the fittest to be the standard by which to measure the values of all other labor, and consequently of all other things whose value depends on the labor of making or procuring... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1853 - 522 pages
...of the labor of mankind is employed in raising provisions for the mouth. Is not this kind of labor, then, the fittest to be the standard by which to measure the values of all other labor, and, consequently, of all other things, whose value depends on the labor of making or procuring... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1859 - 680 pages
...subsistence -for men. Thus we find, when they took any horses from their enemies, they destroyed them ; and in the commandments, where the labour of the ox and...depends on the labour of making or procuring them 7 may not even gold and silver be thus valued ! if the labour of the fermer in producing a bushel of... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1875 - 768 pages
...of the labor of mankind is employed in raising provisions for the mouth. Is not this kind of labor, then, the fittest to be the standard by which to measure the values of all other labor, and consequently of all other things whose valu: depends on the labor of making or procuring... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1875 - 566 pages
...mankind is employed in raising provisions for the mouth. Is not this kind of labor, then, the fitte it to be the standard by which to measure the values of all other labor, and consequently of all other things whose value depends on the labor of making or procuring... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1884 - 564 pages
...of the labor of mankind is employed in raising provisions for the mouth. Is not this kind of labor, then, the fittest to be the standard by which to measure the values of all other labor, and consequently of all other things whose value depends on the labor of making or procuring... | |
| John Martin Vincent - 1895 - 620 pages
...of the labor of mankind is employed in raising provisions for the mouth. Is not this kind of labor, then, the fittest to be the standard by which to measure the values of all other labor, and consequently of all other things whose •value depends on the labor of making or procuring... | |
| John Martin Vincent - 1895 - 650 pages
...labor of mankind is employed in raising provisions for the mouth. Is not this kind of labor, tfien, the fittest to be the standard by which to measure the values of all other labor, and consequently of all other things whose value depends on the labor of making or procuring... | |
| Benjamin Franklin - 1904 - 478 pages
...the values of all other labor, and consequently of all other things whose value depends on the labor of making or procuring them? May not even gold and silver be thus valued? If the labor of the farmer, in producing a bushel of wheat, be equal to the labor of the miner in producing... | |
| Lewis James Carey - 1928 - 266 pages
...Franklin also indicates that he had abandoned the "labor-time" cost theory of value when he wrote: "Food is always necessary to all; and much the greatest...depends on the labour of making or procuring them?" 1 The two passages from his writings quoted in this paragraph indicate that he was in accord with the... | |
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