Abstract

Literature

December 3, 1914 issue

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The article discusses the book "The Economic Synthesis: A Study of the Laws of Income," by Achille Loria. Since 1877, when Loria took his doctor's degree at Bologna, he has written every few years a considerable book, and at shorter intervals periodical articles, on some subject of economics. He has published in the fields of economic theory, of economic history, and of applied economics, a list of his books presents a bewildering variety. In human history, "the process that is common to all the successive economic forms is the association of labor, a constant and invariable phenomenon in all ages, while the factor of immanent instability of all the changing social forms is the coercion that disciplines the association of labor.

See Also:

ECONOMIC Synthesis: A Study of the Laws of Income, The (Book); LORIA, Achille; ECONOMICS; INCOME; LABOR; ECONOMIC structure
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