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Front Page arrow Titles (by Subject) arrow 485.: mcculloch to ricardo1[Answered by 486 & 491] - The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 9 Letters 1821-1823

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485.: mcculloch to ricardo1[Answered by 486 & 491] - David Ricardo, The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 9 Letters 1821-1823 [1821]

Edition used:

The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, ed. Piero Sraffa with the Collaboration of M.H. Dobb (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2005). Vol. 9 Letters 1821-1823.

Part of: The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, 11 vols (Sraffa ed.)

About Liberty Fund:

Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational foundation established to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals.


485.

mcculloch to ricardo1
[Answered by 486 & 491]

My Dear Sir

I send you herewith my second Lecture which contains an outline of my projected course on Political Economy2 —I hope you will be able to read it without much difficulty, and I shall be most happy to hear what you think of it—The first Lecture is on the nature of the evidence on which conclusions in the Political and Economical sciences are founded,3 and I shall avail myself of some future opportunity to send it to you when I have rendered it legible—

This will be delivered to you by Mr. Thomas Dick one of the Commissioners of Police for this city—He has gone to London to attend the Committee on the Police bill—If you could give him, or any of the other commissioners, introductions to any of your friends who are members, it might be of considerable service—We are all deeply interested in the fate of this question—If the bill introduced by Mr. William Dundass be passed into a law, it will in effect form the heaviest, the most oppressive, and most degrading law to which any part of the country was ever subjected—

Have the goodness to send me the book on bullion, &c,4 along with the enclosed Lecture by Mr. Dick when he returns to Edinburgh—If however you should not have had time to look over the Lecture previously to Mr. Dicks departure it is of no moment, as I can get it at some future period—I am with great regard

Yours ever faithfully

J. R. McCulloch

[1 ]Addressed: ‘David Ricardo Esq’—not passed through the post. MS in R.P.—Letters of MCulloch to Ricardo, XIII.

[2 ]Probably embodied in Mulloch’s A Discourse on the Rise, Progress, Peculiar Objects, and Importance, of Political Economy: containing an Outline of a Course of Lectures on the Principles and Doctrines of that Science, Edinburgh, Constable, 1824, p. 72 ff.

[3 ]Cp. the leading article in the Scotsman, 12 May 1821, ‘Nature of the Evidence from which Conclusions in Political Economy ought to be Deduced.—Mr Owen’s Pretended Experiment shown to be No Experiment at all’, partly reproduced in Mulloch’s Discourse, 1824, p. 10 ff.

[4 ]See above, pp. 156–7.