232 MODERN MONETARY SYSTEMS
its commercial rate (or its “intrinsic” value) in our opinion,
far from being the basis of its monetary value, was more or
less the result of the system of free coinage which ensures
that the quantity produced, whatever it may be, will flow
into the various monetary units at a fixed price. And so
it has led us to define our conception of a standard.
These concluding theoretical considerations are not in-
dispensable for the understanding of all monetary
phenomena. But we believe that they will contribute to
an understanding of some of these phenomena and in
particular those which are connected with the working of
bimetallism during the first three quarters of the 19th
century, and which would be inexplicable if money were
conceived as a commodity or if its legal value were deter-
mined by a commercial rate.
Finally, when we come to practical application, we
have attempted to show that the conception to which a
scientific study of monetary phenomena leads contains the
elements of the solution of some of the most serious
problems of the present day.