De Quincey's writings.
THAT natural distinction, which takes place from the very beginnings of society, between value as founded upon some serviceable quality in an object too largely diffused to confer any power of purchasing other objects, and value as founded upon some similar quality in an object so limited as to become property, and thus having a power to purchase other objects, has long been familiar to the public ear under the antithetic expressions of "value in use" and "value in exchange."
December 20, 2005
publish date
Paperback
physical format
300
pages
Publisher
Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library
External links
Librarything
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