| Sir George Smyth Baden-Powell, George Baden-Powell - Depressions - 1879 - 396 pages
...protection has an innate tendency to annihilate individual energies. Mill writes : " Letting alone should be the general practice; every departure from...required by some great good, is a certain evil." The eminent Spanish economist, Sefior Prendergast, puts it thus : "If you lose confidence in the natural... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1882 - 624 pages
...strong case, not on those who resist, but on those who recommend, government interference. Laisserfaire, in short, should be the general practice : every departure...idea may be formed of it from the description by M. Dunoycr* of the restraints imposed on the operations of maimfacture under the old government of France,... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1884 - 616 pages
...strong case, not on those who resist, but on those who recommend, government interference. Laisserfaire, in short, should be the general practice : every departure...idea may be formed of it from the description by M. Dnnoycr* of the restraints imposed on the operations of manufacture under the old government of France,... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1885 - 626 pages
...resist, but on those who recommend, government interference. Letting alone, in short, should be tho general practice : every departure from it, unless...formed of it from the description by M. Dunoyer* of tho restraints imposed on the operations of manufacture under the old government of France, by tho... | |
| Sir Guilford Lindsey Molesworth - 1885 - 44 pages
...— not on those who resist — but on those who recommend government interference. Letting alone, in short, should be the general practice ; every departure...it, unless required by some great good, is a certain cvil. (' Political Economy,' JS Mill, bk. v. chap, xi.) * If we were to partition out England into... | |
| American Economic Association - Economic history - 1886 - 476 pages
...to the rule, that the state should not interfere with industrial action. "Laissez-faire," he says, "should be the general practice; every departure from...unless required by some great good, is a certain evil." But we need not trouble ourselves with the varying views of important economists, for it will do no... | |
| American Economic Association - Economics - 1887 - 476 pages
...to the rule, that the state should not interfere with industrial action. '-Laissez-faire," he says, "should be the general practice; every departure from...unless required by some great good, is a certain evil." But we need not trouble ourselves with the varying views of important economists, for it will do no... | |
| 1887 - 690 pages
...narrowest compass. " Letting alone should be the general practice," is the statement of JS Мш • ч every departure from it, unless required by some great good, is a certain evil." Laisser-fairc is the antithesis to " paternal fovernment "and " grandmotherly legislation." till (... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Economics - 1888 - 620 pages
...strong case, not on those who resist, but on those who recommend, government interference. Laisserfaire, in short, should be the general practice : every departure...idea may be formed of it from the description by M. Dunoycr* of the restraints imposed on the operations of manufacture under the old government of France,... | |
| Lewis Thornton - Philosophy and religion - 1890 - 396 pages
...case, not on those who resist, but on those who recommend, government interference. Laisser-faire, in short, should be the general practice; every departure...unless required by some great good, is a certain evil." 2 " We cannot conceive of any political doctrine," says Ranke, " which, when compared with the ideal,... | |
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