Nothing, at first sight, can seem more reasonable and just ; but when you examine its meaning you soon find that there is no real meaning at all. It amounts merely to saying that a man ought to have what he ought to have. There is no way of deciding what... Political Economy - Seite 61von William Stanley Jevons - 1880 - 134 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| sir Robert Harry Inglis Palgrave - 1882 - 250 Seiten
...examine its meaning you soon find that there is no real meaning at all. It amounts merely to saying, that a man ought to have what he ought to have. There is...five shillings; a few receive as much as ten, or even 1 Tact, judgment. * Fallacious, deceptive. twenty shillings a day ; which of these rates is fair ?... | |
| 1889 - 1068 Seiten
...examine its meaning you soon find that there is no real meaning at all. It amounts merely to saying that a man ought to have what he ought to have. There is no way of deciding what is a fair day's wages. If the saying means that all should receive the same fair wages, then all the different characters... | |
| George A. Sanders - 1898 - 246 Seiten
...society on any but the present individualistic basis." Jevons says, in Scientific Primer, Chap. VII. : " There is no way of deciding what is a fair day's wages outside of competition;" and he might have added, that there is no other way of deciding what is a... | |
| Charles Gide - 1903 - 732 Seiten
...its meaning, you soon find that there is no real meaning at all. It amounts merely to saying, that a man ought to have what he ought to have. There is no way of deciding what is a fair day's wages. ... If the saying means that all should receive the same fair wages, then all the different characters... | |
| William Dwight Porter Bliss, Rudolph Michael Binder - 1908 - 1340 Seiten
...but its present indi viduahstic basis " (Sidgwick). Jevons says: "Scientific Primer." chap, vii.): "There is no way of deciding what is a fair day's wages, outside competition." Lastly, the believers in competition defend ¡t on the ground that it tends to... | |
| Charles Gide - 1909 - 728 Seiten
...its meaning, you soon find that there is no real meaning at all. It amounts merely to saying, that a man ought to have what he ought to have. There is no way of deciding what is a fair day's wages. . . . If the saying means that all should receive the same fair wages, then all the different characters... | |
| Sir Robert Harry Inglis Palgrave, Robert Harry Inglis Palgrave - 1901 - 824 Seiten
...ch. iv. ; Edgeworth, Mathematical Psychics, pp. 20-56). Jevons says (Scientific. Primer, ch. vii.), "there is no way of deciding what is a fair day's wages " outside competition. It is difficult even to imagine upon what other principle certain complicated... | |
| Francis Ysidro Edgeworth - 1925 - 464 Seiten
...work. . . . But, when you examine its meaning, you soon find that there is no real meaning at all. There is no way of deciding what is a fair day's wages." l It has been well observed that an intuition as to the just rate of wages, the labourer's share of... | |
| Robert Harry Inglis Palgrave, Henry Higgs - 1926 - 954 Seiten
...ch. iv. ; Edgeworth, Mathematical Psychics, pp. 20-58). Jevons says (Scientific Primer, ch. vii.), "there is no way of deciding what is a fair day's wages" outside competition. It is difficult even to imagine upon what other principle certain complicated... | |
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