We know very well, that nothing is more injurious to the police, or municipal conftitution of any city or colony , than the forcing of a particular trade. Nothing more dangerous than the overpeopling any manufacture, or multiplying the traders or dealers... Characteristicks of Men, Manners, Opinions, Times - Page 42by Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of Shaftesbury - 1714Full view - About this book
| Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of Shaftesbury - Ethics - 1732 - 476 pages
...Mankind. We know very well, that nothing is more injurious to the Police, or municipal Conflitution of any City or Colony, than the forcing of a particular...this Mother-Land of Superflition, * Juvenal. Sat. xv. ver. 35. See VOL. II. f. 387, 388. that that * the Sons of certain Artifts were byCh. i. Law oblig'd... | |
| Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of Shaftesbury - Characters and characteristics - 1790 - 428 pages
...mankind. We knov/ very Well, that nothing is more injurious to the police, or municipal cbrtftitution of any city or colony , than the forcing of a particular...overpeopling any manufacture, or multiplying the traders of dealers of whatever vocation , beyond their natural proportion, and the public demand. Now, it happened... | |
| Herodotus - Greece - 1812 - 468 pages
...CLXVII. I am not able to decide whether the Greeks borrowed this last-mentioned custom from titular trade ; nothing more dangerous than the over-peopling any manufacture, or multiplying the traders and dealers, of whatever vocation, beyond their natural proportion, and the public demand. Now it happened... | |
| Herodotus - 1821 - 478 pages
...a parCLXVII. I am not able to decide whether the Greeks borrowed this last-mentioned custom ticular trade ; nothing more dangerous than the over-peopling any manufacture, or multiplying the traders and dealers, of whatever vocation, beyond their natural proportion, and the public demand. Now it happened... | |
| Herodotus - Greece - 1830 - 542 pages
...father.] — We know very well, that nothing ii more injurious to the police or municipal constitution of any city or colony, than the forcing of a particular...overpeopling any manufacture, or multiplying the traders and dealers of whatever vocation, beyond their natural proportion, and the public demand. Now it happened... | |
| Herodotus - 1830 - 472 pages
...father."} — We know very well, that nothing it more injurious to the police or municipal constitution of any city or colony, than the forcing of a particular...the overpeopling any manufacture, or multiplying the trader* and dealers of whatever vocation, beyond their natural pro. portion, and the public demand.... | |
| Herodotus, William Beloe - Greece - 1831 - 524 pages
...father."] — We know very well, that nothing is more injurious to the police or municipal constitution of any city or colony, than the forcing of a particular...more dangerous than the overpeopling any manufacture, ormultiplying the traders and dealers of whatever vocation, beyond their natural proportion, and the... | |
| Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of Shaftesbury - Characters and characteristics - 1900 - 396 pages
...of mankind. We know very well that nothing is more injurious to the police or municipal constitution of any city or colony than the forcing of a particular...vocation, beyond their natural proportion and the public demand. Now it happened of old, in this motherland of put case, ail four had passed through... | |
| Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of Shaftesbury - Philosophy - 1999 - 536 pages
...nothing is more injurious to the police" or municipal constitution of any city or colony than the foreing of a particular trade; nothing more dangerous than...whatever vocation beyond their natural proportion and the public demand. Now it happened of old, in this motherland of superstition, that the sons of certain... | |
| |