

#OCKHAM NEXUS FREE#
For Oresme, money is the community’s property by natural law and any ruler who alters the coinage without being legally authorized to do so by the people is no longer a prince governing free subjects, but a tyrant dominating slaves. This article contends that, while concerned specifically with the subject of debasement, Oresme advanced in De moneta one of the Middle Ages’ most uncompromising and conceptually innovative arguments for limited royal government. In focusing his attention upon the pressing problem of the debasement of the coinage in royal policy, the scholastic theorist Oresme inaugurated a new genre of text: the treatise on monetary issues.
#OCKHAM NEXUS SERIES#
Note: We do not offer technical support for developing or debugging scripted downloading processes.This article lays out a new interpretation of Nicole Oresme’s De moneta (c.1356–60) by situating the work in a series of underexplored intellectual and ideological contexts. Note that this policy may change as the SEC manages SEC.gov to ensure that the website performs efficiently and remains available to all users. This SEC practice is designed to limit excessive automated searches on SEC.gov and is not intended or expected to impact individuals browsing the SEC.gov website. Once the rate of requests has dropped below the threshold for 10 minutes, the user may resume accessing content on SEC.gov. If a user or application submits more than 10 requests per second, further requests from the IP address(es) may be limited for a brief period.

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#OCKHAM NEXUS DOWNLOAD#
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