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" ... is to be counted into the bread we eat; the labour of those who broke the oxen, who digged and wrought the iron and stones, who felled and framed the timber employed about the plough, mill, oven, or any other utensils, which are a vast number, requisite... "
The Theory and Practice of Banking - Page 82
de Henry Dunning Macleod - 1875
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Compass of Society: Commerce and Absolutism in Old-regime France

Henry C. Clark - 2007 - 416 pages
...experiences if they would but reflect upon them: "Twoud be a strange catalogue of things," Locke wrote, "that industry provided and made use of about every loaf of bread, before it came to our use, // we could trace them"—which, he adds, is impossible. "A Man would be laugh'd at," Mandeville...
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Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Human nature and history

John T. Scott - 2006 - 496 pages
...labour"; for "labour makes the far greatest part of the value of things, we enjoy in this World," since "Nature and the Earth furnished only the almost worthless Materials, as in themselves" (Second Treatise 5; see Pangle 1988). Locke's portrait of our unaltered place in nature and his emphasis...
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Individualität und Eigentum: zur Rekonstruktion zweier Grundbegriffe der Moderne

Christian Schmidt - 2006 - 352 pages
...scarcely be worth any thing: it is to that we owe the greatest part of all its useful products (...] nature and the earth furnished only the almost worthless materials, as in themselves.«34 Durch die Bearbeitung der gemeinsam besessenen Natur verbindet sich das Lockesche Individuum...
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Justice: A Reader

Michael J. Sandel - 2007 - 428 pages
...any other utensils, which are a vast number, requisite to this corn, from its being seed to be sown to its being made bread, must all be charged on the...only the almost worthless materials as in themselves. 'Twould be a strange catalogue of things that industry provided and made use of, about every loaf of...
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The Economy of the Earth: Philosophy, Law, and the Environment

Mark Sagoff - 2007
...Locke, if the price of fertile land is negligible, as it was in America, the economic value of food "must all be charged on the account of labour, and received as an effect of that."27 Locke reasoned that of the prices we associate with agricultural commodities, "nine-tenths...
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Encyclopaedia Britannica; Or A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and ..., Volume 1

1824 - 996 pages
...utensils, which are a vast number, requisite to this corn, from its being seed to be sown, to ¡te being made bread, must all be charged on the account...received as an effect of that. Nature and the earth furnishing only the almostworthless materials as in themselves. — 'Twould be a strange catalogue...
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The Penny Magazine of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful ..., Volume 13

1844 - 520 pages
...number, requisite to this corn, from its being seed to 1 e sown to its being made bread, must all lie charged on the account of labour and received as an effect of that : nature ami the earth furnishing only the most worthless materials as in themselves. Twmild be a strange catalogue...
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