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XLIII. | Gold & silver are constituted, by the nature of things, money, & universal money; independently of all convention & of all law |
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XLIV. | The employment of the other metals for these purposes is only subsidiary |
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XLV. | The use of gold & silver as money has augmented their value as materials |
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XLVI. | Variations in the value of gold & of silver, compared with the other articles of Commerce & with one another |
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XLVII. | The custom of payments in money has given rise to the distinction between the Buyer & the Seller |
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XLVIII. | The practice of using money has greatly facilitated the separation of different labours among the different Members of Society |
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XLIX. | Concerning the reserve of annual products, accumulated to form capitals |
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L. | Moveable riches. Accumulation of money |
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LI. | Moveable riches are an indispensable prerequisite for all lucrative works |
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LII. | Necessity of advances in agriculture |
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LIII. | First advances furnished by the land while still uncultivated |
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LIV. | Cattle, moveable wealth even before the cultivation of the lands |
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LV. | Another kind of moveable wealth & of advances of agriculture: the slaves |
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LVI. | Moveable riches have a value exchangeable against the land itself |
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LVII. | Valuation of lands in accordance with the proportion which the revenue bears to the amount of moveable wealth, or the value, for which they are exchanged: this proportion is what is called the penny of the price of lands |
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LVIII. | Every capital in money, or every sum of value whatever it may be, is the equivalent of a piece of land producing a revenue equal to a definite fraction of that sum. First employment of capitals. Purchase of an estate of land |
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