Molinari’s Long Footnote on William J.– That it has made production precarious and distribution unfair. – That Protectionism has reduced overall output. Appendix: Molinari’s Plan for a Labor Exchange.– The natural organization of the sale of labor. – An example from the British West Indies. – That the worker can sometimes dictate to the employer. – Proof of the law which makes the price of things gravitate towards their production costs. – Articles 414 and 415 of the Penal Code – The Union of Paris Carpenters, 1845. – The disastrous results of legislation limiting the rate of interest. – How these conditions can be alleviated. –Legislation regulating lending at interest. Molinari’s Long Footnote on Legislation about Making a Will.The natural organization of farming under a regime of free property. – Comparison of French and British agriculture. – The public domain, property belonging to the State, departments and communes. – The law of compulsory acquisition for reasons of public utility. SUMMARY – Continuation on the attacks made on external property. – Counterfeiting – Ownership of inventions. SUMMARY: Attacks made on external property. Molinari’s Long Footnote about External property.– Listing the attacks mounted today on the principle of property. – That property is the foundation of the natural organization of society. – That society is governed by natural, immutable and absolute laws. SUMMARY : Attitudes to the problem of society. A Chronology of the Life and Works of Molinari.Molinari and Bastiat on the Theory of Value.Ulcerous, Leprous, and Tax-Eating Government.The Liberty of the Theatre and Liberty in the Theatre.Religious Protectionism and Religious Contraband.Property, the Self, and the Different Types of Liberty.The Production of Security II: Is Molinari a Real Anarcho-Capitalist?.Malthusianism and the Political Economy of the Family.Labour Unions, Labour Exchanges, and Labour Merchants.The Dreamer (le Rêveur) of Radical Liberal Reforms.Conversations with the People about Economic Liberty: 1849, 1855, 1886.Molinari and the Economists’ Campaign against Socialism, 1848-49.The photo of Molinari (1819-1912) which accompanied his obituary in the Journal des économistes an extensive collection of material by and about Molinari at David Hart's website.Bibliography: Gustave de Molinari (1819-1912): An Annotated Bibliography by David Hart.Liberty Matters Discussion Forum: Roderick Long, “Gustave de Molinari’s Legacy for Liberty” (May, 2013).The original French language version in facsimile PDF and HTML can be found here: Gustave de Molinari, Les Soirées de la Rue Saint-Lazare: Entretiens sur les lois économiques et défense de la propriété (Paris: Guillaumin, 1849).Works in the OLL by Gustave de Molinari (1819-1912).and many of the quotes are in both French and English for the moment.įor further information about Molinari, see the following: The page numbers of the original edition are indicated with square brackets, e.g. In the meantime, this version contains all the scholarly apparutus of footnotes, glossaries, and appendices which are designed to make Molinari's world a bit more understandable to readers in the early 21st century. The translation was done by Dennis O'Keeffe and it is being edited by David M. A few footnotes need to be updated and the Introduction by the editor David M. This is a final draft version of a book that will be published by Liberty Fund in the future. Gustave de Molinari, Evenings on Saint Lazarus Street: Discussions on Economic Laws and the Defence of Property (1849) Note In the meantime, this version contains all the scholarly apparatus of footnotes, glossaries, and appendices which are designed to make Molinari’s world a bit more understandable to readers in the early 21st century.
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