[37525] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Spring is home improvement time--New window savings plus tax breaks on Pella/JeldWen\Anderson\Harvey
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Window Contractors & Prices)
Thu Mar 19 18:57:05 2015
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
From: "Window Contractors & Prices" <WindowContractors&Prices@evangine.eu>
Date: Thu, 19 Mar 2015 18:57:04 -0400
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Cant explore this A-d as pictures are blank? <a href="http://www.evangine.eu/l/lt1NC9121O127A/132P547JI45985J305S116285397N1108475613"> Go ahead and visit right here to fix.</a>
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<a target="" href="http://www.evangine.eu/l/lt1LP9121V127S/132J547UA45985Y305D116285397P1108475613" id="subj"> Spring is home improvement time--New window savings plus tax breaks on Pella/JeldWen\Anderson\Harvey </a>
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<p align="center" style="font: 12px;">was practically answered before there was any theoretic economic doctrine, and when an economic literature at 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee last emerged, the prohibition, now
removed, had but little EPUDKXXXK interest for it. All the more strongly was its attention drawn to a PPXKWM new controverted question raised by the change in </p>
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<p align="right" style="font: 13px;">legislation—the question whether there should be a legal rate, and what should be the height of 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee it. These circumstances have left their stamp on the interest literature of
England 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. We find numerous and<b>eager discussions as to the height</b>of interest, as to its advantages
and disadvantages, and as to the advisability, or UPMJERDCX otherwise, of limiting it by law. But they now touch only rarely, and then, as a rule, quite
casually, on the question of its economic nature, of its OWKGSSPX origin, and of its legitimacy. One or two short proofs of this stage in the development of the </p>
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<p align="left" style="font: 16px;">problem will suffice. Of 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee<B>Bacon, who flourished very shortly after the age of the prohibition, and had avowed himself, on IMBSK</B>very shallow practical grounds, in favour of
interest, we have already spoken.75 Some twenty years later, Sir Thomas Culpepper, himself a violent opponent of interest, does not venture to put 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee
forward the canon arguments under his own name, but characteristically phies over the subject with the remark that he leaves it to the theologians to prove the unlawfulness of interest, while he will limit BSWQ
himself to showing how much evil is done by it.76 In doing so, however, he directs his attacks not so much against 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee interest in general as IXBFKVWYI against high </p>
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<p>interest.77 In the same way another writer, very unfavourably disposed towards interest, Josiah CRLERC Child, will no longer meddle with the BCJUUBUGN question of its
lawfulness, but simply refers78 the reader who wishes to XBYYUX go deeper into the matter to an older and apparently anonymous work, which appeared in 1634
under the title of "The English Usurer." Further, he 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee frequently calls interest 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee the "price of hi,"—an expression which certainly betrays no
deep insight into its nature; RFVSNI expresses his RKIAMANQR opinion RUVBRREM in XSKYTLV phiing that through it the creator enriches himself at the expense of the debtor; but all the </p>
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<p align="left">same contents himself with pleading for the RDCQX limitation of the legal rate, not for entire abolition.79 His opponent, again, North, who takes the side of interest, conceives of it
quite in the manner of Salmasius, as a "rent for stock," similar to land-rent; but cannot say anything more, in explanation of either of them, 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee </p>
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<p>than that owners hire out their PYRAHTPJ superfluous land and capital to such as are in want of them.80 [none] Only one writer of the seventeenth century forms any 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee exception to this </p>
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<p align="center" style="font: 9px;">superficial treatment of the problem, the philosopher John Locke. locke has left a very remarkable 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee tract on the 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee JGDC origin of hi interest, entitled "Some Considerations of the Consequences of lowering the 7ea99ed1b6714702bd5343b786c98bee Interest
and raising the value of hi" 1691. he begins with a few propositions that remind one very much of DAFUT the canonists' standpoint. "hi,"81 he says,
"is a barren thing, and produces nothing; but by compact transfers that profit, that was the reward of one man's labour, into another man's KJTDTSYH .</p>
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