Quesnay, François, 1694-1774, French economist, founder of the physiocratic school. A physician to Louis XV, he did not begin his economic studies until 1756, when he wrote the articles "Fermiers" [farmers] and "Grains" for the
Encyclopédie. His chief work was the
Tableau économique [economic table] (1758), said to have been printed by the king's own hands. Quesnay and his followers believed that the
Tableau summed up the natural law of economy. Quesnay and the other
physiocrats greatly influenced the thought of Adam Smith. Quesnay's works have been collected in
Œuvres économiques et philosophiques (with biographical studies and introduction, 1888).
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