fullscreen: A critical dissertation on the nature, measures and causes of value

CHAPTER 1. 
ON THE NATURE OF VALUE. 
VALUE, in its ultimate sense, appears to mean 
the esteem in which any object is held. It de- 
notes, strictly speaking, an effect produced on the 
mind ; but as we are accustomed in other cases 
to give a common name to a feeling and to 
the cause which has excited it, and to blend 
them together in our thoughts, so in this case 
we regard value as a quality of external ob- 
jects. Colour and fragrance, for example, are 
words which designate both the cause and the 
effect, both the material quality which produces 
the feeling in the mind, and the feeling pro- 
duced. The philosopher, however, is the only 
one who discerns the distinction, and colour 
and fragrance are never thought of by the ge-
	        
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