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Books Group:The United States Democratic review Volume 10, no. 47 - Livres de poche
ISBN: 1235972682
[EAN: 9781235972683], Neubuch, [PU: RareBooksClub], BOOKS GROUP,SUBJECTS, This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 48 pages. Dimensions: 9.7in. x 7.4in. x 0.1in.This historic book may h… Plus…
[EAN: 9781235972683], Neubuch, [PU: RareBooksClub], BOOKS GROUP,SUBJECTS, This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 48 pages. Dimensions: 9.7in. x 7.4in. x 0.1in.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1842 Excerpt: . . . The tone throughout is decidedly though moderately liberal. The information contained in the chapters on France and Germany was in part new to the English and American public. In the chapter on the Balance of Power, the effect of the recent growth of Russia on the condition of the political world is indicated with a distinctness which gave to this portion of the work an air of novelty. In a separate chapter on the British navy, the course pursued by Great Britain in regard to neutral rights, during the then recent war, is severely censured, and a total abstinence from the seizure of private property at sea is recommended as the only just and consistent plan of maritime warfare. In the following year, he published at London and Boston a work entitled, New Ideas on Population, with Remarks on the Theories of Godwin and Malthus. This is an essay on the relation naturally existing between the state of population and the supply of the means of subsistence. In studying the theory of government, with the feeling of a friend of liberty and social improvement, he had found himself compelled to encounter at the threshold of the subject the chilling and discouraging paradoxes of Malthus upon Population. This writer had undertaken to prove, that by a standing law of nature, there is everywhere a necessary disproportion between the demand for, and the supply of the means of subsistence; that this disproportion is the real cause of the misery of the great mass of the people throughout the world; and that as their misery does not result from bad government, so it cannot be prevented by good; and that the attempts to ameliorate the condition of society, by supposed political improvements, are, of course, perfectly useless. For the same reason any attempt to a. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN.<
- NEW BOOK Frais d'envoi EUR 11.49 BuySomeBooks, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A. [52360437] [Rating: 5 (von 5)]
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Books Group:
The United States Democratic review Volume 10, no. 47
- Livres de pocheISBN: 9781235972683
RareBooksClub. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 48 pages. Dimensions: 9.7in. x 7.4in. x 0.1in.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purc… Plus…
RareBooksClub. Paperback. New. This item is printed on demand. Paperback. 48 pages. Dimensions: 9.7in. x 7.4in. x 0.1in.This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1842 Excerpt: . . . The tone throughout is decidedly though moderately liberal. The information contained in the chapters on France and Germany was in part new to the English and American public. In the chapter on the Balance of Power, the effect of the recent growth of Russia on the condition of the political world is indicated with a distinctness which gave to this portion of the work an air of novelty. In a separate chapter on the British navy, the course pursued by Great Britain in regard to neutral rights, during the then recent war, is severely censured, and a total abstinence from the seizure of private property at sea is recommended as the only just and consistent plan of maritime warfare. In the following year, he published at London and Boston a work entitled, New Ideas on Population, with Remarks on the Theories of Godwin and Malthus. This is an essay on the relation naturally existing between the state of population and the supply of the means of subsistence. In studying the theory of government, with the feeling of a friend of liberty and social improvement, he had found himself compelled to encounter at the threshold of the subject the chilling and discouraging paradoxes of Malthus upon Population. This writer had undertaken to prove, that by a standing law of nature, there is everywhere a necessary disproportion between the demand for, and the supply of the means of subsistence; that this disproportion is the real cause of the misery of the great mass of the people throughout the world; and that as their misery does not result from bad government, so it cannot be prevented by good; and that the attempts to ameliorate the condition of society, by supposed political improvements, are, of course, perfectly useless. For the same reason any attempt to a. . . This item ships from La Vergne,TN., RareBooksClub<
- Frais d'envoi EUR 10.60 BuySomeBooks
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Books Group:The United States Democratic Review Volume 10, No. 47 (Paperback)
- Livres de poche 2012
ISBN: 1235972682
[EAN: 9781235972683], Neubuch, [PU: Rarebooksclub.com, United States], Language: English Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****. This historic book may have numerous typos and missing… Plus…
[EAN: 9781235972683], Neubuch, [PU: Rarebooksclub.com, United States], Language: English Brand New Book ***** Print on Demand *****. This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1842 Excerpt: .The tone throughout is decidedly though moderately liberal. The information contained in the chapters on France and Germany was in part new to the English and American public. In the chapter on the Balance of Power, the effect of the recent growth of Russia on the condition of the political world is indicated with a distinctness which gave to this portion of the work an air of novelty. In a separate chapter on the British navy, the course pursued by Great Britain in regard to neutral rights, during the then recent war, is severely censured, and a total abstinence from the seizure of private property at sea is recommended as the only just and consistent plan of maritime warfare. In the following year, he published at London and Boston a work entitled, New Ideas on Population, with Remarks on the Theories of Godwin and Malthus. This is an essay on the relation naturally existing between the state of population and the supply of the means of subsistence. In studying the theory of government, with the feeling of a friend of liberty and social improvement, he had found himself compelled to encounter at the threshold of the subject the chilling and discouraging paradoxes of Malthus upon Population. This writer had undertaken to prove, that by a standing law of nature, there is everywhere a necessary disproportion between the demand for, and the supply of the means of subsistence; that this disproportion is the real cause of the misery of the great mass of the people throughout the world; and that as their misery does not result from bad government, so it cannot be prevented by good; and that the attempts to ameliorate the condition of society, by supposed political improvements, are, of course, perfectly useless. For the same reason any attempt to a.<
- NEW BOOK Frais d'envoiVersandkostenfrei (EUR 0.00) The Book Depository US, London, United Kingdom [58762574] [Rating: 5 (von 5)]