PREFACE. vii The causes of value have been also too neg- ligently passed over. Little inquiry has been made into the nature of these causes, or their mode of operation, and to this slightness of examination may be attributed several import- ant errors, manifested in attempts at undue generalization, in perversions of language, and in the rejection of circumstances which have a real and permanent effect. A singular confusion has also prevailed with regard to the ideas of measuring and causing value, and in the language employed to express them. The perpetual shifting from one notion to the other, the use of common terms for both ideas, and the consequent ambiguity, vacilla- tion, and perplexity, exhibit a remarkable picture of the difficulty of thinking with close. hess, as well as of the defects of language as an instrument of reasoning. The confusion and obscurity, which mark the