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Book Categories |
Acknowledgments | xi | |
1 | Introduction | 1 |
2 | The first community and the equation of exchange | 9 |
The origin of money and the nature of exchange | 10 | |
Making sense of Aristotle | 12 | |
The "primitivist-modernist" controversy | 14 | |
The exchange relation | 17 | |
Conclusion | 23 | |
3 | The sons of Adam, justice in exchange, and the medieval economy | 26 |
Equality and justice in exchange | 28 | |
The "abacus manuscripts" | 31 | |
The "Rules of Barter" | 32 | |
Formalization of the "Rules of Barter" | 36 | |
The "difficulties of barter" revisited | 39 | |
"Just price" and equality of exchange revisited | 41 | |
Conclusion | 43 | |
4 | The bartering savage and the equation of exchange | 46 |
The inconvenience of barter and emergence of money | 47 | |
Exchange and the meanings of "value" | 50 | |
Solving the equation of exchange in the "rude state of society" | 56 | |
"Civilized nations" and the solution to the equation of exchange | 59 | |
Conclusion | 62 | |
5 | Primitive communities, the equation of exchange, and proper point of departure | 65 |
The origin of exchange and money | 66 | |
Aristotle and the relation of exchange | 69 | |
The relation of exchange and exchange-value | 71 | |
Monetary theory and history: the second point of departure | 75 | |
Monetary theory and history: the first point of depature | 79 | |
Conclusion | 82 | |
6 | Mademoiselle Zelie and the "scientific" theory of exchange | 84 |
The difficulties of barter | 85 | |
Turning economics into a "science" | 89 | |
Jevons's "scientific" theory of exchange | 93 | |
Walras and the "scientific" theory of exchange | 97 | |
Buying and selling in a moneyless Walrasian world | 102 | |
Conclusion | 105 | |
7 | Neo-Walrasianism, the matrix of exchange, and beyond | 108 |
Realistic or unrealistic? | 109 | |
Neo-Walrasianism and the "matrix of exchange" | 112 | |
The "matrix of exchange" and the real economy | 117 | |
Post-Clower matrices of exchange | 121 | |
Conclusion | 126 | |
8 | Conclusion | 130 |
Notes | 136 | |
References | 145 | |
Index | 153 |
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Add Money and Exchange, Whether a theoretical system is realistic or not has been a concern in economics, particularly in monetary theory, over the past century. Following John R. Hicks' proposal that a realistic monetary theory could be constructed along an evolutionary path, s, Money and Exchange to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Money and Exchange, Whether a theoretical system is realistic or not has been a concern in economics, particularly in monetary theory, over the past century. Following John R. Hicks' proposal that a realistic monetary theory could be constructed along an evolutionary path, s, Money and Exchange to your collection on WonderClub |