| John Stuart Mill - 1848 - Страниц: 590
...resist, but on those who recommend, government interference. Laisser-faire, in short, should be tiie general practice ; every departure from it, unless...the cases to which it is most manifestly applicable, has heretofore been infringed by governments, future ages will probably have difficulty in crediting.... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1848 - Страниц: 602
...case, not on those who resist, but on those who recommend, government interference. Laisser-faire, in short, should be the general practice ; every departure...evil. The degree in which the maxim, even in the cases lo which it is most manifestly applicable, has heretofore been infringed by governments, future ages... | |
| Jacobus Tielenius Kruythoff - 1852 - Страниц: 182
...limits of the laissez-faire or non- interference principle}, ita principium statuit : » Laissez-faire in short should be the general practice; every departure...unless required by some great good, is a certain evil." XXXII. Recte idem, pag. 539, problema de alendis in civitate pauperibus ita posuit: »how to give the... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1857 - Страниц: 610
...case, not on those who resist, hut on those who recommend, government interference. Laisaer-faire, in short, should be the general practice: every departure...the cases to which it is most manifestly applicable, has heretofore been infringed by governments, future ages will probably have difficulty in crediting.... | |
| 1857 - Страниц: 626
...means of effecting a greater public good ;" because, as he writes in another place, " laisser faire, in short, should be the general practice; every departure...unless required by some great good, is a certain eviL"* Precisely, as a surgeon says, if a broken leg cannot be cured by splints, and bandages, and time, why... | |
| John Wrottesley Baron Wrottesley - 1860 - Страниц: 312
...self-control; and the natural stimulus to these is the difficulties of life." Again : " Laisser-faire should be the general practice : every departure from...unless required by some great good, is a certain evil." Mr. Mill proceeds to detail some of the departures from the general practice which he seems to consider... | |
| Sir John Thomas Gilbert - 1861 - Страниц: 430
...would, in a word, have remembered the doctrine of Mr. Mill upon state interference, " laisser faire, in short, should be the general practice; every departure from it, unless required by some great public good, is a certain evil." Strike off the restrictions upon leasing which lurk in old settlements... | |
| William Galt - 1864 - Страниц: 386
...strong case, not on those who resist, but on those who recommend Government interference. Laisser-faire, in short, should be the general practice ; every departure...required by some great good, is a certain evil."* Such are the recorded opinions of one of our most distinguished writers on political economy, and these... | |
| Sir George Smyth Baden-Powell, George Baden-Powell - 1879 - Страниц: 396
...protection has an innate tendency to annihilate individual energies. Mill writes : " Letting alone should be the general practice; every departure from...required by some great good, is a certain evil." The eminent Spanish economist, Sefior Prendergast, puts it thus : "If you lose confidence in the natural... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1881 - Страниц: 616
...strong case, not on those who resist, but on those who recommend, government interference. Laisscrfaire, in short, should be the general practice : every departure...the cases to which it is most manifestly applicable, has heretofore been infringed by governments, future ages will probably have difficulty in crediting.... | |
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