Economic Sophisms and “What Is Seen and What Is Not Seen”. Bastiat Frédéric

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Название Economic Sophisms and “What Is Seen and What Is Not Seen”
Автор произведения Bastiat Frédéric
Жанр Экономика
Серия The Collected Works of Frederic Bastiat
Издательство Экономика
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781614872740



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in the first edition of the Œuvres complètes was called the “third” edition on its volume’s title page. As noted above, volume three of the Œuvres choisies, which appeared in 1863, included as volume 3 the fourth edition of the Economic Harmonies. When the second edition of the Œuvres complètes was published between 1862 and 1864, it included as volume 6 the fifth edition of Economic Harmonies (1864). This practice continued throughout the nineteenth century, with editions of Economic Harmonies staying in print as a separate volume as well as being included as volume 6 in later editions of the Œuvres complètes; thus, by 1870–73, when the third edition of the Œuvres complètes appeared, the version of Economic Harmonies that appeared in volume 6 was titled the “sixth” edition of the work.

      Other “editions” of the Œuvres complètes include a fourth edition, 1878–79; a fifth edition, 1881–84; if there was a sixth edition, the date is unknown; a seventh edition, 1893; and a final edition may have appeared in 1907.3

      [print edition page xxxvii]

       Abbreviations

      WORKS IN THIS VOLUME

      Economic Sophisms First Series

ES1 I Introduction: Author’s Introduction
ES1 1 Abundance and Scarcity
ES1 2 Obstacle and Cause
ES1 3 Effort and Result
ES1 4 Equalizing the Conditions of Production
ES1 5 Our Products Are Weighed Down with Taxes
ES1 6 The Balance of Trade
ES1 7 Petition by the Manufacturers of Candles, Etc.
ES1 8 Differential Duties
ES1 9 An Immense Discovery!!!
ES1 10 Reciprocity
ES1 11 Nominal Prices
ES1 12 Does Protection Increase the Rate of Pay?
ES1 13 Theory and Practice
ES1 14 A Conflict of Principles
ES1 15 More Reciprocity
ES1 16 Blocked Rivers Pleading in Favor of the Prohibitionists
ES1 17 A Negative Railway
ES1 18 There Are No Absolute Principles
ES1 19 National Independence
ES1 20 Human Labor and Domestic Labor
ES1 21 Raw Materials
ES1 22 Metaphors
ES1 C Conclusion

      [print edition page xxxviii]

      Economic Sophisms Second Series

ES2 1 The Physiology of Plunder
ES2 2 Two Moral Philosophies
ES2 3 The Two Axes
ES2 4 The Lower Council of Labor
ES2 5 High Prices and Low Prices
ES2 6 To Artisans and Workers
ES2 7 A Chinese Tale
ES2 8 Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc
ES2 9 Theft by Subsidy
ES2 10 The Tax Collector
ES2 11 The Utopian
ES2 12 Salt, the Mail, and the Customs Service
ES2 13 Protection, or the Three Municipal Magistrates
ES2 14 Something Else
ES2 15 The Free Trader’s Little Arsenal
ES2 16 The Right Hand and the Left Hand
ES2 17 Domination through Work

      Economic Sophisms “Third Series

ES3 1 Recipes for Protectionism
ES3 2 Two Principles
ES3 3 M. Cunin-Gridaine’s Logic
ES3 4 One Profit versus Two Losses
ES3 5 On Moderation
ES3 6 The People and the Bourgeoisie
ES3 7 Two Losses versus One Profit
ES3 8 The Political Economy of the Generals
ES3 9 A Protest
ES3 10 The Spanish Association for the Defense of National Employment and the Bidassoa Bridge
ES3 11 The Specialists
ES3 12 The Man Who Asked Embarrassing Questions
ES3 13 The Fear of a Word
ES3 14 Anglomania, Anglophobia
ES3 15 One Man’s Gain Is Another Man’s Loss
ES3 16 Making a Mountain Out of a Molehill

      [print edition page xxxix]

ES3 17 A Little Manual for Consumers; In Other Words, for Everyone
ES3 18 The Mayor of Énios
ES3 19 Antediluvian Sugar
ES3 20 Monita Secreta: The Secret Book