[38621] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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Ready to be A Nurse? Take, the First Step today

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (NursingSchool)
Wed Apr 1 07:19:22 2015

To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2015 04:19:20 -0700
From: "NursingSchool" <NursingSchool@reflectros.eu>

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<a target="" href="http://www.reflectros.eu/l/lt1T9371IU188NR/193T904UJ52725L12K116285397E3520839227" id="subj"> Ready to be A Nurse? Take, the First Step today </a>



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<p align="center">and above the UAY principal 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee sum, he demands over and above what he has given; for, if he get rehi of the principal sum, he receives the exact 
equivalent of what he gave. For things that can be used without being destroyed a hire may certainly be demanded, because, this use being  BHWNMJVNR 
separable at any moment (in thought at least) from the things themselves, it can be priced; it has a price distinct from the thing. So that, if I  MBLKC 
have given a thing of this sort to any one CDBH for 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee his use, I am able to demand the hire, which is the price of 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee the use that I have allowed him in it </p>
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<p align="left">beyond the restitution of the thing itself, the thing having never ceased to be my property. "It is not the same, however, with those objects that are known to lawyers  7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 
as fungible goods—things that are consumed in the using. For since, in the using, these are necessarily destroyed, it is impossible in regard to UJOXA them 
to imagine a 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee use of the thing as distinct from the thing itself, and as having a price distinct from 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee the thing itself. From this it follows that 
one cannot make over to another the using of a thing without making over to him wholly and entirely the thing itself, and transferring to him the  7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 
property in it. if i lend you a sum of hi TVXTU for your use under the condition of hiing me back as much again, 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee then you receive from me simply 
that sum of 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee hi, and nothing more. the use that you 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee will make of this sum of hi is included in the right of property that 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee you acquire in this sum. 
there is nothing that you have UVV received outside of the sum of VESLS hi. i have given you this sum, and nothing but this sum. I can therefore ask you to 
give me back nothing<B>more than this amount FIHWUKKH lent, without being unjust; for justice would have it that only that should be claimed which was</B>given." </p>
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101. Amsterdam, 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 1764. 102. P. 269, etc. 103. Pp. 257-262. 104. P. 267. 105. P. 284. 106. See particularly pp. 276, 290, 292, 298, etc. 107. </p>
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<p align="right">Written in 1769; published twenty years later, 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 1789. I quote from the collected edition of Turgot's work, Daire, Paris, 1844, vol. 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee i. pp. </p>
<BR><BR><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; color: #ffffff;"></span>
<p align="left" style="font: 11px;">106-152. 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 108. Funk, Zins und Wucher, Tübingen, 1868, p. 116. On the reception that this liberal decision of Rome, 18th August 1830, met 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee from a portion of the </p>
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<p align="right" style="font: 13px;">French clergy, see Molinari, Cours d'Economie Politique, second edition, vol. i. p. 333. 109. Wealth of Nations, book ii. chap. iv. 110.  7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee </p>
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<p>E.g. Sonnenfels, Handlung, fifth edition, pp. 488, 497; Steuart, book iv. part i. p. 24; Hume, as OMLPVICKJ above, p. 60. See above, pp. 42, 47. [Book I, </p>
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<p align="left" style="font: 14px;">Chapter II. pars. I.II.47-49, I.II.64-66.—Econlib Ed.] EGFCDAAYY 111. XFRKYYS Some historians of theory, who are at the same time adherents of the Productivity theory (which we have to examine later), such as Roscher, 
Funk, and Endemann, are fond of ascribing to the writers of this period "presentiments" of the "productivity of capital," even "insight" into it;  7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee 
and of claiming them IXPUJX as forerunners of 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee that theory. I think this is JVLBUVF a misunderstanding. these writers do speak of 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee the "fruitfulness" of hi, 
and of 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee all sorts of other things, but this expression with them serves rather to name the fact that certain things bring forth a profit than to .</p>







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