UNION, Treaty of, between Scotland and England, Article of, regulating the proportion of the land-tax to be raised, in the former country, ii. 234. Usury and Interest, on their connexion really and verbally, i. 411; should it be regulated by law? on, in general, ii. 146-195; Aristotle's doctrine as to its morality, 146, seq.; on the meta- phor of money breeding money, 147; in its unrestricted signification, in- cludes all exaction of any interest, 148; abhorrence of usury, or taking of any interest for money, common to all forms of religious opinion, 151; laws against, only aggravate the dis- tress of the unfortunate, 178, seq.; in Russia, laws against are a dead letter, 181; in England, virtual usury at least is permitted by law in the case of Drawing and Redrawing, 182; also in Pawnbroking, 182-186; also in what is called Bottomry and Respon- dentia, 186; laws against held by the Author to be impolitic, 184, seq., 190. See Interest.
Utility, degrees of, as applied to com- modities, i. 359; the intrinsic utility of a commodity, what? 360.
VALERIUS Maximus, quoted as to di vorce among the Romans, i. 81; as to the effect of a contumelious joke on the Roman electors, 144. Valuation, standard of: according to our Author, corn, or the ordinary food of the people, affords the best, i. 361, 362.
Valuations, or Land Surveys, might, the Author thinks, be accomplished by a Register of Leases, ii. 239. Value exchangeable, of everything manufactured depends on two cir- cumstances, the price of the raw material, and the price of the labour expended on it, i. 261; the word value has two different meanings, -sometimes expressing utility of a commodity, (value in use,) sometimes the power of purchasing other goods, (value in exchange,) 355, 259; the accuracy of this distinction canvassed, ib.; vacillation by authors in the use of this term, 355, seq.; with what meaning is it employed by the Author? 359; value of money used in two different senses,-either for the quantity of the precious metals to
be given in exchange for commodities, or for the proportion between a sum of money and its interest in the market, 408, 409; these two modes of valuing money have little mutual connexion, 409; their difference has, however, escaped the attention of some respectable writers, 409, seq. Vanderlint, (Jacob,) quoted in regard to an exclusive territorial tax, i. 299, seq., (see also, ii. 239;) in favour of the freedom of commerce, ii. 34, seq. Vauban, (Maréchal de,) quoted as to the effects of want on population, i. 103; his proposal to substitute the Dîme Royale for the Taille, &c., ii. 246. Vaughan, (Mr. Rice,) quoted as to the wages of labour constituting a crite- rion of real prices, i. 364; as to wheat affording a standard for the exchangeable value of money in a nation, 370.
Vaughan, (Mr. William,) his Treatise on Commerce referred to, ii. 79. Venice Venetians, (along with the Genoese,) originators of the Funding System, in the sixteenth century, ii. 214; their nobles debarred from trade, 383; constitution of the legislative senate under the old government, 435.
Villanage, effect of its suppression upon
Population, i. 187, 210, seq.
Virgil, his description of Neptune, calm- ing the winds and waves applied to the moral influence of a man in authority over a popular assembly, ii. 362.
Virtue, what its meaning by Montes- quieu as the principle of a democracy? ii. 408. Vizier, necessity for such a minister in an Absolute Monarchy, ii. 390. Voght, (Herr Caspar,) on the expendi- ture for work-houses in England, ii. 274; alleged as to their management in Hamburgh, 303-305. Voltaire, adduced in praise of Galiani, ii. 66; quoted as to the incompatibi- lity of original genius with cultivation, 344; as to Montesquieu, 412.
WAGES: have the wages of labour in
England latterly increased? ii. 283, seq. Wales, (William,) as an antagonist of Dr. Price, with respect to the pro- gressive unhealthiness of London, i. 231; on the increasing population of
Great Britain, 234, 235; on the po- pulation of London, 244. Wallace, (Robert, D.D.,) adduced as to increase of population, i. 63; as to Roman fortunes, 146, 147; quoted as to government and population, 204, seq.; how his speculations on this subject were warped, 211; as to the proportion of men capable of bearing arms to the general population of a country, 224; on the population of the globe and its several quarters, 232; coincides with Hume in regard to the value of the precious metals, 373, 374; dissents, however, from his conclusions, 375; referred to touching the circulation of money 381; as to the money value of grain in anti- quity, 381, 448; his work, On the Numbers of Mankind, commemorated in the conclusion of the Course, ii. 458.
Warburton, (Bishop,) quoted against providing for the Poor by law, ii. 324. Wargentin, (Herr,) as to the proportion
of the sexes born in Sweden, i. 88; as to the proportion of annual births in Sweden, 222. Waste Lands, Parliamentary Committee on, first Report of, showing the pro- gress of Enclosures, i. 239; how they may be turned to advantage in the increase of population, ii. 141. Watchmaking, illustration from, ii. 12, seq.
Watt, (Robert, M.D.,) his Bibliotheca Britannica adduced by Editor, i. 202, 275, 326, 333, et alibi. Wealth, ancient and modern, i. 148. Wealth, National, a branch of Political Economy Proper, i. 33, seq.; on, in general, forming Book II. of Political Economy Proper, 253; ii. 253; on the meaning of the phrase, 253. Webster, (Rev. Dr.,) on the statis- tics of Scottish population, i. 245,
Wedderburn, (Lord Chancellor Lough- borough,) quoted in regard to Bills of Enclosure, i. 136, 137.
West Indies, our colonies in, rate of in- terest there, i. 417, seq. Wheat, consumption of, progress of, in various parts of England and Scot- land, i. 248, 249; not alone affording an example of the common food of the people, 368; ii. 57, 58. Whitbread, (Samuel, M.P.,) against any compulsory support of the Poor, ii.
279, 281; on the advantages of Sav- ings Banks, 313.
Wills, Latter, policy and impolicy of restraints on, ii. 204, seq., 208-210. Winchelsea, (Lord,) the advantages of the potato as an economical article of food, inculcated by, ii. 142; his Paper on the Poor referred to, 323. Witt, (John de,) quoted as to the free- dom of trade, ii. 18, 19.
Woods and Forests, Reports of the Commissioners of, ii. 40, seq.. Workhouses, as charitable institutions, ii. 300-305. World, see Globe.
Wotton, (Sir Henry,) quoted as to good laws and a good nature, i. 49.
XENOPHON, his treatise On the Improve- ment of the Revenue of the State of Athens, adduced, i. 36, seq.; quoted as to the division of labour and its effects, 311, 312; adduced as to the Athenian republic, ii. 362, 403, 404; as to the Spartan commonwealth, 402.
YOUNG, (Mr. Arthur,) holds that Popu- lation should be regarded as subordi- nate to Agriculture, i. 66; as to the population of Ireland, 99; as to pota- toes, the food of the Irish, 101; as to the comparative universality of mar- riage in Ireland, 102; quoted in fa- vour of pasturage, 106-108; against the impolitic burdens upon Agricul- ture, 122; referred to in relation to large farms, 126; in favour of large farms, 127, 130, 131; quoted as to the comparative profit of arable and pas- turing Agriculture, 138; adduced as to the Roman policy in regard to Agriculture, 141; quoted as to the subdivision of properties in France, 148, seq.; as to the influence of Manu- factures upon Agriculture and Popu- lation, 158, seq.; as to these in special reference to France, 163, seq.; to Ire- land, England, and Italy, 165-167; his opinion in regard to the pernicious influence of Manufactures upon Agri- culture controverted, 168, seq.; ii. 199; his inconsistency in this relation shewn, 171-178; shews that a dis- tinction of the different kinds of popu
lation must be taken into account, in estimating the prosperity of a nation from the numbers of its people, 199; controverts Dr. Price in regard to the decline of population in Great Britain, 234; his estimate of the numbers of persons engaged in farming, 240; on the population of England and Wales, 243; coincidence of his opinion, in regard to the value of the precious metals, with those of Hume and Wal- lace, 374; on the policy of the French government in regard to the Corn Trade, ii. 72, seq.; quoted in reference to this trade, 82; his opinions in re- gard to this criticised, 83, 84; adduced in regard to the Corn Trade, 114; in regard to the dearth of 1799-1800, 122, seq.; his Table shewing the aver- age prices of wheat for the year fol- lowing the harvest of 1798, 128; his opinion in regard to the relation of the price to the plenty and scarcity of
grain, not very explicit, 132, seq.; adduced in praise of milk as an eco- nomical article of diet, 142; also of potatoes, 143; as to the meaning of ability, 222; quoted as to the disad- vantages of a variable land-tax, 236; noticed as against an exclusive land- tax, 237; quoted in regard to tithes, 245; adduced as in favour of taxes on consumption, 252; in favour of the project of a limited assessment for the poor, 278, 280; in regard to a paradox,-that a liberal reward of labour encourages idleness, 311; his Annals of Agriculture quoted, 321,
Young, (Sir William,) reprobates the English Law of Settlement, ii. 269.
ZIMMERMANN, his Political Survey of Europe quoted, i. 214.
EDINBURGH T. CONSTABLE, PRINTER TO HER MAJESTY.
In handsome 8vo, with Portraits, &c., price 12s. per Volume,
COMPLETE EDITION OF THE WORKS
COMPRISING, AMONG OTHER LARGE ADDITIONS, A CONCLUDING CHAPTER OF HIS DISSERTATION, LECTURES ON
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WITH A BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR BY SIR WILLIAM HAMILTON, BART.
AFTER the death of Reid, DUGald Stewart was the head of what has been denominated "The Scottish School of Philosophy;" long before his death he was, indeed, universally acknowledged as the most distinguished living philosopher of Great Britain, and likewise as one of the best writers in the language. His published works are considerable, both in number and extent, and are also conversant with the most important parts of Philosophy,—historical, speculative, and practical. Of these works, the earlier have been frequently reprinted; but from circumstances, merely private, and which it is unnecessary to specify, new editions of his later writings have been withheld, and a collection of the whole, which ought long ago to have appeared, has only now become possible.
This Collection, which it is proposed forthwith to publish, will appear in handsome 8vo, and may extend to nine, perhaps to ten, volumes. It will not be merely a uniform re-impression of the former Publications. These it will of course comprise,-following the most authentic Edition, with the Author's Manuscript Corrections, and his frequent and important Additions;-but in the extensive literary re
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