The Standard of Value
By
William Leighton Jordan
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Excerpt from The Standard of ValueIN commenting on the First Edition of the following Paper on Lord Liverpool's Oversight a few days ago, a London reviewer alludes to it as a defunct controversy. If, however, the reviewer will look a little more closely at the book, he will find that it not only is not the defunct controversy he supposes, but that it is the discussion of a
Excerpt from The Standard of ValueIN commenting on the First Edition of the following Paper on Lord Liverpool's
Excerpt from The Standard of Value
IN commenting on the First Edition of the following Paper on Lord Liverpool's Oversight a few days ago, a London reviewer alludes to it as a defunct controversy. If, however, the reviewer will look a little more closely at the book, he will find that it not only is not the defunct controversy he supposes, but that it is the discussion of a
Excerpt from The Standard of Value
IN commenting on the First Edition of the following Paper on Lord Liverpool's Oversight a few days ago, a London reviewer alludes to it as a defunct controversy. If, however, the reviewer will look a little more closely at the book, he will find that it not only is not the defunct controversy he supposes, but that it is the discussion of a question which was never dreamt of in the philosophy of William Cobbett, Sir Robert Peel, or John Stuart Mill and that it is not only a living question, but what the Lord Mayor of London has recently, at a public meeting at the Mansion House, declared to be a question which he thought there could be no denying was the most important of the present age. 1.
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