Ian Pitchford

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Set against the backdrop of a country where, in mid-eighteenth century, no clear remedy against disastrously arbitrary rule was in sight, Montesquieu’s partial reliance on commerce, the bill of exchange, and arbitrage as safeguards against les grands coups d’autorité and war can be interpreted as a counsel of despair or, alternatively, as an extraordinary leap of optimistic imagination.
The Passions and the Interests: Political Arguments for Capitalism before Its Triumph (Princeton Classics)
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