The Great Awakening: The Story of the Twenty-second Century |
From inside the book
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Page 21
... fall in price in any substance , how do we know what it means unless we accept some standard commodity like gold ? " " Let me illustrate the foolishness of your last statement by a simple example . Suppose there is in a room a ...
... fall in price in any substance , how do we know what it means unless we accept some standard commodity like gold ? " " Let me illustrate the foolishness of your last statement by a simple example . Suppose there is in a room a ...
Page 22
... falling . You cannot un- derstand it . You work harder and harder , but the temperature keeps going down , and you are at a loss to comprehend it , until it dawns upon you that your master , by his manipulations outside of the room , is ...
... falling . You cannot un- derstand it . You work harder and harder , but the temperature keeps going down , and you are at a loss to comprehend it , until it dawns upon you that your master , by his manipulations outside of the room , is ...
Page 24
... fall in prices ; while in the other case the supply is unlimited , as it depends upon the amount of wealth , and ... falling prices , you must admit that it shows progress . shows that we can now make useful com- mmodities much cheaper ...
... fall in prices ; while in the other case the supply is unlimited , as it depends upon the amount of wealth , and ... falling prices , you must admit that it shows progress . shows that we can now make useful com- mmodities much cheaper ...
Page 25
... fall ; and we find but few men going deeply into the subject , or else they would have seen what one man saw very clearly , and that is , that with progress comes poverty . This is such an evident fact in all growth of the past that it ...
... fall ; and we find but few men going deeply into the subject , or else they would have seen what one man saw very clearly , and that is , that with progress comes poverty . This is such an evident fact in all growth of the past that it ...
Page 40
... " added the professor , with a smile . This brought to mind the Broadway stage line of New York , with its rumbling wagons always on the point of falling apart and its skeletons for horses ; and I was thinking of the 40 The Great Awakening.
... " added the professor , with a smile . This brought to mind the Broadway stage line of New York , with its rumbling wagons always on the point of falling apart and its skeletons for horses ; and I was thinking of the 40 The Great Awakening.
Common terms and phrases
aerodrome affairs amount of money balance of trade beautiful believe Blackburn brain called capital capitalist catboat cause cent circulating medium civilization commodity condition constitutional monarchy course creased credit money creditor debt dollar drome economic rent electric engineer equally everything evil existence fact feet fessor flying machine force forms of wealth gold gold standard hands happiness hard HENRY THOMAS BUCKLE human hundred increase industry interest labor value land legal tender legislation lever look market value means ment miles money issued Money Republic motors nation nature never nineteenth century Pangloss patrolmen political economy population production of wealth professor progress quantity of money Senate simply single tax soon station stopped suppose tell thermopile things thought tion took trade tremendous turned twenty-second century wages wheels worth
Popular passages
Page 56 - Hath not a Jew eyes? hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? fed with the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases, healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same winter and summer, as a Christian is? If you prick us, do we not bleed ? if you tickle us, do we not laugh ? if you poison us, do we not die ? and if you wrong us, shall we not revenge ? If we are like you in the rest, we will resemble you in that.
Page 335 - ... of knowledge is not error, but inertness. All that we want is discussion, and then we are sure to do well, no matter what our blunders may be. One error conflicts with another, each destroys its opponent, and truth is evolved. This is the course of the human mind ; and it is from this point of view that the authors of new ideas, the proposers of new contrivances, and the originators of new heresies, are benefactors of their species. Whether they are right or wrong is the least part of the question....
Page 335 - This is the course of the human mind, and it is from this point of view that the authors of new ideas, the proposers of new contrivances, and the originators of new heresies, are benefactors of their species. Whether they are right or wrong, is the least part of the question. They tend to excite the mind ; they open up the faculties ; they stimulate us to fresh inquiry; they place old subjects under new aspects; they disturb the public sloth; and they interrupt, rudely, but with most salutary effect,...
Page 298 - Alas, that life must forever feed its growth on death, and human progress advance only over the ruins of the perfect ! 317 They fell, and the saws went at them.
Page 83 - INSTRUMENTS. 293 made from cleft bones were the instruments most used. The drum was the favorite, and the beating of several in nice accord sufficed alone for an accompaniment to the song and the dance. Two kinds of drum are mentioned; of these, the huehuetl™ was a hollow cylinder of wood, about three feet high, and a foot and a half in diameter, curiously carved and painted, and having its upper end covered with a dressed deer-skin, tightened or loosened in tuning, and played upon with the hands....
Page 205 - It is sad to think of, but it is a fact, that if these upper classes had been allowed to exist, their inborn tendency to manage and control the lives of other men, coming from the fact that they had become so used to controlling capital that it was second nature to them, would have been a constant menace to a just social organization, and would in great part have modified the change that was deemed absolutely essential 'Alas, that life must forever feed its growth on death I...
Page 78 - This question of money is of vast importance and is deeper than either free trade or single tax. To treat land as private property is morally wrong, but it is not such an evil as to limit the increase of money, for if it were not for the latter, land market values would not exist.
Page 68 - I, by careful preservation, keep a hat for a year so that it is in just as good condition at the end as it was at the beginning of the year, the worth has not changed, but the market value may fluctuate, for this is a ratio and may be.
Page 31 - This boulevard, like all the other streets, was two hundred feet wide. In the centre there were walks, with flower beds and beautiful trees. It was an earthly paradise. One .who rides a bicycle appreciates the" smoothness of a hard road uncut by horses
Page 332 - Literature, music, the fine arts, and religion are but the superficial embellishments of the age in which they exist, and are moulded by it, but in themselves...