[595]. Pol. 1254a8 ff. He thinks chiefly of the domestic slave.
[596]. Unto This Last, p. 61, an unjust criticism of Mill; ibid., IV, 78: “Production is primarily for the mouth, not for the granary.”
[597]. Op. cit., IV, chap. viii: “Consumption is the sole end and purpose of all production; ... and the interest of the producer ought to be attended to only so far as it may be necessary for promoting that of the consumer.”
[598]. For reference and Greek terms, cf. p. [68].
[599]. For his term ἀφορμή cf. p. [68], n. 8, and infra. It probably was a mere business word to him. DuBois (op. cit., p. 38) thinks that he had a very clear idea of its significance.
[600]. Pol. 1258b12-21; cf. 1258a37 f.
[601]. Ibid. 21-27, and entire chaps., 8-11. For terms, cf. infra.
[602]. iv. 1121a29; 1122a14 f.; cf. the stress on δόσις and χρῆσις rather than on κτῆσις and λῆψις, 1120a8-13; b14-16, and Stewart’s notes, I, 323.
[603]. Rep. 552B, discussed above.
[604]. Souchon (op. cit., p. 121) seems to think it was.