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An incisive rethink of capital from a social perspective. A concise, sharp, enduring classic.John Rae’s The Sociological Theory of Capital, a complete reprint of the 1834 New Principles of Political Economy, offers a lucid and practical nineteenth-century economic theory that places human relations at the centre of monetary life. As an early sociological economics study, Rae examines family structure, labour patterns, property and demographic change to sketch the origins of capitalism and the interdependence of capital and society. The prose balances argument and observation; students of early 1800s economics find a clear sequence of reasoning useful for coursework, while researchers assembling an academic reference collection welcome a primary text for the history of economic thought. Rae’s method invites comparison with classical authors and proves valuable for comparative works on Smith, supplying context for debates about market formation, distribution and institutional change. Plain-spoken yet rigorous, the book rewards general readers who enjoy vintage scholarship as much as historians tracing foundational economic theory.Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Thoughtfully presented for contemporary reading, this reissue situates Rae’s arguments within nineteenth-century Britain and offers an accessible window into debates that helped shape later economic inquiry. Ideal for classic political economy book collectors, for university courses, and for anyone building a shelf of early economic literature, this edition restores a seldom-read voice to circulation and secures its place in libraries and private collections. Useful in teaching and research, the edition suits undergraduate seminars and postgraduate reading lists and offers a ready primary source for essays on market institutions, distribution and the social foundations of economic life. Collectors and casual readers alike discover a patient, empirical voice that enriches any study of the origins of capitalism.