When Political Economy had nothing to recommend it to public notice but its own proper and intrinsic evidence, no man professed himself a political economist who had not conscientiously studied and mastered its elementary principles; and no one who acknowledged himself a political economist discussed an economic problem without constant reference to the recognised axioms of the science. But when the immense success of free trade gave experimental proof of the justice of those principles on which economists relied, an observable change took place both in the mode of conducting economic discussions, and in the class of persons who attached themselves to the cause of Political Economy. Many now enrolled themselves as political economists who had never taken the trouble to study the elementary principles of the science; and some, perhaps, whose capacities did not enable them to appreciate its evidence; while even those who had mastered its doctrines, in their anxiety to propitiate a popular audience, were too often led to abandon the true grounds of the science, in order to find for it in the facts and results of free trade a more popular and striking vindication.
— John Elliot Cairnes, The Character and Logical Method of Political Economy [1875]
- John Elliot Cairnes, 1823-1875
History of Economic Thought - The Character and Logical Method of Political Economy
by John Elliot Cairnes
Library of Economics and Liberty - An Examination into the Principles of Currency [PDF]
by John Elliot Cairnes
History of Economic Thought