Economic theory, from its very beginnings, has endeavored to
discover and formulate the laws governing economic behavior. In the early
period, which was under the influence of Rousseau and his doctrines of the
laws of nature, it was customary to apply to these economic laws the name
and character of physical laws. In a literal sense, this characterization was,
of course, open to objection, but possibly the term “physical” or “natural”
laws was intended merely to give expression to the fact that, just as natural
phenomena are governed by immutable eternal laws, quite independent of
human will and human laws, so in the sphere of economics there exist certain
laws against which the will of man, and even the powerful will of the state,
remain impotent; and that the flow of economic forces cannot, by artificial
interference of societal control, be driven out of certain channels into which
it is inevitably pressed by the force of economic laws.