- Page 5 and 6: DEBT THE FIRST 5,000 YEARS DAVID GR
- Page 7: CONTENTS 1 On The Experience of Mor
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- Page 29 and 30: Chapter Two THE MYTH OF BARTER For
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44 DEBT Recall here what Smith was
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46 DEBT State and Credit Theories o
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48 DEBT most famous exponent was th
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50 DEBT then demands that every fam
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52 DEBT Such examples could be mult
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54 DEBT Now, John Maynard Keynes hi
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56 DEBT having been used as the mai
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58 DEBT representation that is the
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60 DEBT us, then the first step tow
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62 DEBT capacity to measure the exa
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64 DEBT to reconcile with any theor
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66 DEBT "society." It's this debt t
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68 DEBT Set out this way, though, t
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70 DEBT broadly modeled on Medieval
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Chapter Four CRUELTY AND REDEMPTION
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CRUELTY AND REDEMPTION 75 Throughou
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CRUEL TY AND REDEMPTION 77 Unlike w
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CRUEL TY AND REDEMPTION 79 and driv
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CRUELTY AND REDEMPTION 81 particula
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CRUELTY AND REDEMPTION 83 his wife
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CRUELTY AND REDEMPTION 85 naive in
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CRUELTY AND REDEMPTION 87 that this
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90 DEBT could be brought to bear. I
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92 DEBT Would we really be willing
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94 DEBT of Africa, accomplished cur
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96 DEBT say, "And what do I get for
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98 DEBT I will call this "baseline
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100 DEBT definition of a true frien
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10 2 DEBT Finally, once we start th
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10 4 DEBT haggling-an interesting r
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10 6 DEBT people would really want
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10 8 DEBT developed where local ban
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110 DEBT their relations with seden
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112 DEBT have acted toward him in t
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114 DEBT friends, and feudal lords
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116 DEBT This was such a recommenda
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118 DEBT to cut his own throat, thu
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12 0 DEBT citizens of the Republic
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12 2 DEBT No. All human interaction
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124 DEBT often find it insulting to
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12 6 DEBT devils, will seek to turf
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12 8 DEBT In this light, the econom
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13 0 DEBT almost exclusively for th
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132 DEBT that one is asking for som
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13 4 DEBT Certainly no one presenti
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13 6 DEBT able to marry and produce
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13 8 DEBT required, but not doing s
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14 0 DEBT seems singularly apropos.
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14 2 DEBT three wives, and since ad
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14 4 DEBT of its members, and there
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14 6 DEBT We have perhaps a general
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14 8 DEBT tricks you into contracti
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150 DEBT The Tiv, then, were well a
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15 2 DEBT demanding pawns as securi
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15 4 DEBT social currency, "used fo
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15 6 DEBT has pointed out, labor th
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15 8 DEBT disposed of as he wished.
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16 0 DEBT noted, think about what w
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162 DEBT were a leper with no hands
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16 4 DEBT institutions in ways that
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16 6 DEBT The best way to do so, I
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16 8 DEBT At the very least, there
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17 0 DEBT Haitian zombie stories, a
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17 2 DEBT case of minor transaction
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174 DEBT man publicly mocked would
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17 6 DEBT I I I I I What makes Medi
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17 8 DEBT In the very earliest Sume
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18 0 DEBT dowries, with which they
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18 2 DEBT Already, in the earliest
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184 DEBT Patriarchy as we know it s
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18 6 DEBT other members of the uppe
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18 8 DEBT This resulted in a slight
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190 DEBT and that the courtesans, f
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19 2 DEBT The same tensions can be
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194 DEBT repaid at all, the debtor
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19 6 DEBT the circumstances.x6 The
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198 DEBT Ancient Rome (Property and
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200 DEBT as a relation between peop
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202 DEBT the logic of conquest exte
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204 DEBT indistinguishable from the
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206 DEBT them, then what would it m
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208 DEBT here. This is why I develo
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210 DEBT completely isolated beings
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212 DEBT not countenance slaveholdi
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214 DEBT goes on in every period of
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216 DEBT a Persian about the origin
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218 DEBT distribution of allotments
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220 DEBT which the value of sumptuo
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Chapter Nine THE AXIAL AGE (800 BC
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THE AXIAL AGE 225 appear to have be
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THE AXIAL AG E 227 worthless in the
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THE AXIAL AGE 229 generally, as jur
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THE AXIAL AGE 231 designed to encou
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THE AXIAL AGE 233 professional army
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THE AXIAL AGE 235 Asoka's reforms a
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THE AXIAL AGE 237 of the soul or th
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THE AXIAL AGE 239 quality, and tryi
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THE AXIAL AGE 241 he insisted that
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THE AXIAL AGE 243 Materialism II: S
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THE AXIAL AGE 245 Miletus, which al
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THE AXIAL AGE 247 public debts, but
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THE AXIAL AGE 249 responsibility in
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Chapter Te n THE MIDDLE AGES (600 -
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THE MIDDLE AGES 253 was to endure.
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THE MIDDLE AGES 255 They did it abo
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THE MIDDLE AGES 257 vanished from t
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THE MIDDLE AGES 259 bay, without ca
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THE MIDDLE AGES 261 only really ove
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THE MIDDLE AGES 263 They engage in
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THE MIDDLE AGES 265 monasteries cam
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THE MIDDLE AGES 267 In the meantime
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THE MIDDLE AGES 269 other; they wer
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THE MIDDLE AGES 271 The Near West:
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THE MIDDLE AGES 273 and never felt
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THE MIDDLE AGES 275 since the dawn
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THE MIDDLE AGES 277 status and good
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THE MIDDLE AGES 279 the highest exp
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THE MIDDLE AGES 281 Ghazali also no
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THE MIDDLE AGES 283 effectively red
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THE MIDDLE AGES 285 every Biblical
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THE MIDDLE AGES 287 never resolved.
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THE MIDDLE AGES 289 One mustn't exa
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THE MIDDLE AGES 291 capitalism of t
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THE MIDDLE AGES 293 the Turks. 134
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THE MIDDLE AGES 295 his prize, hors
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THE MIDDLE AGES 297 learning all ov
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THE MIDDLE AGES 299 Let's start wit
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THE MIDDLE AGES 301 another man's v
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THE MIDDLE AGES 303 excess, and pot
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THE MIDDLE AGES 305 of metaphysical
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308 DEBT THE EPOCH THAT BEGAN with
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310 DEBT I I I I I After the Mongol
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312 DEBT those mines might have bec
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314 DEBT institutions operate, to d
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316 DEBT life, and then, to enjoy i
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318 DEBT in pay, determined at once
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320 DEBT It is the peculiar feature
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322 DEBT support in towns and villa
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324 DEBT Casimir dutifully doled ou
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326 DEBT Part II: The World of Cred
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328 DEBT founded on trust. Much lik
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330 DEBT in English translation aft
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332 DEBT laws of movement," wrote H
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334 DEBT suits were ever brought to
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336 DEBT In other words, Smith simp
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338 DEBT This is the story normally
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340 DEBT creditors to the crown-off
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342 DEBT such bubbles hit the Londo
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344 DEBT by borrowing that I make s
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346 DEBT everyone agrees, however,
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348 DEBT imagination could devise .
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350 DEBT to the Peruvian company th
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352 DEBT There is, and has always b
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354 DEBT and therefore, free of gui
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356 DEBT of palace intrigues during
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358 DEBT believe this, and particul
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360 DEBT One could go further: the
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362 DEBT U.S. gold reserves to incr
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364 DEBT in anticipation of, or rea
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366 DEBT - Federal Debt - Defense B
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368 DEBT 1970s, and the current, la
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370 DE BT Board of Governors Total
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372 DEBT creating remarkably favora
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374 DEBT government policy should n
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376 DEBT being invested in the mark
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378 DEBT by which progress is achie
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380 DEBT the Grameen Bank insisted,
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382 DEBT keep reminding us, because
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384 DEBT widely Over the last five
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386 DEBT an endless variety of form
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388 DEBT was profoundly democratic.
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390 DEBT The argument might perhaps
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NOTES Chapter One 1. With the predi
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NOTES 395 Italian banker named Bern
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NOTES 397 promise to pay or satisfy
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NOTES 399 Ingham (1996, 1999, 2004)
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NOTES 401 cancel their debts in a c
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NOTES 403 though we can never know
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NOTES 405 themselves as world power
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NOTES 407 case--aristocratic, but a
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NOTES 409 that country's most signi
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NOTES 411 45· See Abraham 1933:26;
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NOTES 413 83. Vickers (1996) provid
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NOTES 415 are also to be found in C
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NOTES 417 West. This might be the o
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NOTES 419 actually taking place; as
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NOTES 421 90. Plato recounts the ev
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NOTES 423 on with suspiCion. Simila
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NOTES 425 18. One authority states
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NOTES 427 IJ. Elayi & Elayi 1992. 1
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NOTES 429 48. Pythagoras was, as fa
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NOTES 431 77· I am partly inspired
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NOTES 433 had equal rights, but who
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NOTES 435 48. Marco Polo observed t
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NOTES 437 from Jewish or Christian
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NOTES 439 of wage-earners and those
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NOTES 441 profits of which they so
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NOTES 443 On Taoist fu : Kaltenmark
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NOTES 445 25. Martin Luther, Von Ka
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NOTES 447 vagrants that they were e
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NOTES 449 later inventions-and Lord
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NOTES 451 a curia, the senior staff
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NOTES 453 31. This is, incidentally
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456 BIBLIOGRAPHY Altekar, Anant Sad
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458 BIBLIOGRAPHY Berndt, Ronald M.
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460 BIBLIOGRAPHY Byrne, Frances. 19
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462 BIBLIOGRAPHY Davidson, Paul. 2o
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464 BIBLIOGRAPHY Ekejiuba, Felicia
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466 BIBLIOGRAPHY Flynn, Dennis and
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468 BIBLIOGRAPHY Gough, Kathleen. 1
- Page 478 and 479:
470 BIBLIOGRAPHY Harrison, James P.
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472 BIBLIOGRAPHY ---. 1994. "Fair D
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474 BIBLIOGRAPHY Khan, Mir Siadat A
- Page 484 and 485:
476 BIBLIOGRAPHY Laum, Bernard. 192
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478 BIBLIOGRAPHY Maloney, Robert P.
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480 BIBLIOGRAPHY Munro, John H. 200
- Page 490 and 491:
482 BIBLIOGRAPHY Patterson, Orlando
- Page 492 and 493:
484 BIBLIOGRAPHY Rohrlich, Ruby. I9
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486 BIBLIOGRAPHY ---. 1965. "Usury
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488 BIBLIOGRAPHY ---. 1995· L'Etat
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490 BIBLIOGRAPHY Wallace-Hadrill, A
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492 BIBLIOGRAPHY Yang, Lien-sheng.
- Page 502 and 503:
494 INDEX Annikeris, 197, 421n90 An
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496 INDEX barter systems, types of
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498 INDEX capital as credit in Isla
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500 INDEX Chinese dynasties Han, 22
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502 INDEX cooper bars, as currency,
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504 INDEX "debt," etymology of, 59
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506 INDEX economies, types of comma
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508 INDEX fiat money, 53, 270, 364,
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510 INDEX gold, U.S. myths about, 3
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512 INDEX Hinduism (continued ) lan
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514 INDEX insulting/competing langu
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516 INDEX khipu system, Inca, 220,
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518 INDEX Maori people gift exchang
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520 INDEX Miller, William Ian, 407n
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522 INDEX 9/11, 362, 363 Nixon, Ric
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524 INDEX "primitive barter," 394n7
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526 INDEX religious ideologies (con
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528 INDEX slavery (continued ) in m
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530 INDEX suftaja, 201, 276, 291, 4
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532 INDEX u ulema (legal scholars),
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534 INDEX women (continued ) patria