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butre
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Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2012) 44 (suppl_1): 71–89.
Published: 01 December 2012
... was sufficiently developed that one of Quesnay’s closest disciples, Charles Richard de Butré, conceived of a plan for some sort of national accounting. Copyright 2012 by Duke University Press 2012 References Alimento Antonella . ( 1995 ) 2008 . Réformes fiscales et crises politiques dans la...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2008) 40 (1): 1–42.
Published: 01 March 2008
... of the Versailles
networks in the genesis of Quesnay’s workshop and the part taken by
men interested in “practical agriculture” (agriculture pratique). One was
Charles de Butré, a gentleman from Poitou who, like the Count of Angi-
viller and Madame de Montmort’s husband, belonged to the bodyguards...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2011) 43 (1): 25–58.
Published: 01 March 2011
... each com-
munity imposed on the individuals who were members of both groups.
For example, how could the same creative individuals (Butré, Du Pont,
Quesnay, Mirabeau) be part of two different creative communities? Did
belonging to both groups affect the form and content of the intellectual...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2012) 44 (suppl_1): 253–269.
Published: 01 December 2012
...) Cavalieri, Enea, 94
Burgundy, Duke of, 75 Censuses, 49, 52, 111. See also
Burns, Eve, 119 US Census Bureau
Butler, Elizabeth, 187 Central Statistical Committee
Butré, Charles Richard de, 72, 80, (TsSK), 48, 52, 56, 57...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2002) 34 (2): 449–478.
Published: 01 June 2002
..., if the cost canbe kept downto eight, thenthe excess will be twelve”
(François Quesnay, 1958, 469).
Produit net and surplus (excédent) are identified in this way, and
Charles de Butré (1781) equated produit net with revenue net, as did
Quesnay in the tableau économique.
The term was used from...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2023) 55 (1): 145–172.
Published: 01 February 2023
... of Butré worked again on both the figures and the text. In the second draft, only four out of the twelve economic pictures from that manuscript were printed; the others were drawn by hand by Mirabeau's secretary. It suggests that at that moment, there were only a limited number of printed figures...
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Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2004) 36 (3): 445–474.
Published: 01 September 2004
... an arithmetician with
limited abilities and, as the manuscripts of the Philosophie rurale made
clear, he forwarded most of his calculations to Charles de Butré, whose
task was to verifythem (Quesnay1761e). Moreover, in some of the
manuscripts Quesnay’s handwriting stops short in the middle of a com-
plex...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2007) 39 (Suppl_1): 195–214.
Published: 01 December 2007
...), the first economic collaborators
of François Quesnay—Charles-Georges Le Roy, Charles de Butré, Eti-
enne Marivetz, and Marmontel—were all clients from either the Noailles
family, the Villeroy family, or Madame de Pompadour. Moreover, men of
letters—like Mirabeau and Du Pont de Nemours, and officials...