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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
All is more or less proper to serve as a common measure, in proportion as it is more or less in general use, of a more similar quality, and more easy to be divided into aliquot parts. All is more or less applicable for the purpose of a general pledge of exchange, in proportion as it is less susceptible of decay or alteration in quantity or quality.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
Eripuit coelo fulmen sceptrumque tyrannis. He snatched the lightning from the sky and the sceptre from tyrants.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
Gold and silver are constituted, by the nature of things, money, and universal money, independent of all convention, and of all laws.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
If the land was divided among all the inhabitants of a country, so that each of them possessed precisely the quantity necessary for his support, and nothing more; it is evident that all of them being equal, no one would work for another. Neither would any of them possess wherewith to pay another for his labour, for each person having only such a quantity of land as was necessary to produce a subsistence, would consume all he should gather, and would not have any thing to give in exchange for the labour of others.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
It is not error which opposes the progress of truth; it is indolence, obstinacy, the spirit of routine, every thing which favors inaction.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
The earth has been cultivated before it has been divided; the cultivation itself having been the only motive for a division, and for that law which secures to every one his property. For the first persons who have employed themselves in cultivation, have probably worked as much land as their strength would permit, and, consequently, more than was necessary for their own nourishment.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
The expenses of government, having for their object the interest of all, should be borne by everyone, and the more a man enjoys the advantages of society, the more he ought to hold himself honored in contributing to those expenses.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
The whole mass of humanity . . . marches constantly, though slowly, toward greater perfection.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
What I admire in Columbus is not his having discovered a new world but his having gone to search for it on the faith of an opinion.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
Morality in the general is well enough known by men, but the particular refinements of virtue are unknown by most persons; thus the majority of parents, without knowing it and without intending it, give very bad examples to their children.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
Respect is tendered with pleasure only where it is not exacted.
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By AnonymAnne-robert-jacques Turgot
The expenses of government, having for their object the interests of all, should be borne by every one, and the more a man enjoys the advantages of society, the more he ought to hold himself honoured in contributing to these expenses.
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