The Concept of Value: A Rejoinder
I. Points of agreement, 709. — Need of economic standards independent of price, 710. — The place of inappropriables, 711. — Weighting of individuals in social value, 712. — Conflicts of values, 713. — Values of institutions should be imputed to institutions, not to single commodities, 715. — Marginal method reversed, 715. — Some of the requirements of a social theory of value, 716. — II. Dual nature of Professor Anderson's concept, 716. — Term "rate" avoids a confusion, 717. — III. Doctrine v. definition, 718. — Doctrine criticized by Professor Anderson not implied in the mere definition of value, 719. — Examples, 720. — IV. Use of the relative concept, 720. — "Assuming a fixed value of money, " and other criticisms, 721. — V. Economic v. non-economic, 722. — Values of institutions not to be taken for granted as something supreme and apart from single exchanges, 723. — Conclusion, 723.
- DOI
- 10.2307/1883305
- Volume
- 29 (4)
- Pages
- 709
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- BibTeX
- Sources
- openalex crossref