Humanity have always had markets, investment has been a thing for thousands of years, while economy growth wasn't something people expected until something around the middle ages.
You probably won't get a lot to support that idea on the literature.
The Romans had private ownership of land, mines and early industrial concerns (e.g., steelmaking) 2000 y ago. They had a legal system to protect the interests of investors. Also, professionals specialized in providing various financial services.
And capitalism with unlimited ability to print money has only existed for 53 years. And capitalism with actual unlimited money printing has only existed for 17 years. These aren't ancient systems or part of fundamental human nature; they're modern experiments.
The restriction on how much money banks can print has only some 200 years. A while before that, banks invented unlimited money printing, and a while before that banks were completely reinvented as regulated entities because money was coming and going without control...
I don't know how the ancient civilizations handled non-metalic money, I know that on the Middle age it was a famous kingdom killer because most kings couldn't refrain from creating infinite money.
Calling these things modern experiments even though nothing fundamental has changed since the Roman age seems pretty foolish.
If anything, the experiments you're talking about are just the logical consequences of doing the same thing over and over.
After all, the experiments never seemed to modify the problematic element, all they did was increase the quantity according to the logic of accumulation.
In fact, isn't it remarkable that the last 2000 years have produced the exact same pattern over and over again?
The logic is always the same. Money from period A can be carried over to period B. This means there is too little money during period A and too much during period B.
Since period A is perpetually today, and period B is perpetually tomorrow, one could get the idea to at least fix period A, which isn't as stupid as the Austrian economists would like to tell you. But fixing today through quantity means there is even more money carried over to tomorrow. The problem is being fixed with more of itself. It certainly isn't being fixed by having a competing system for trade.
Abandoning gold, fractional reserve banking, QE, etc all exist due to the fundamental mistake of making it possible to carry something that is time and location bound away from the time and location it is bound to.
Reintroducing a gold standard doesn't change this logic. It just makes it slightly more visible.
When you look at Arrow-Debreu models, you see the assumption is that utility maximizing economic agents will spend their entire budget on either present utility (consumer goods) or future utility (investment goods). The concept of carrying money from one period to another doesn't exist and is inherently incompatible with equilibrium and yet you don't see economists warning us about the carrying over of past balances into the future with the exception Keynes and Wolfgang Stützel. Not even Marx thought that this was problematic. Even the Austrian economists know the problem, as they argue that the single individual with the lowest time preference should own the entire planet and that the real problem is the national central bank (which happens to be quite small in contrast to world domination).
The problem and its half baked attempts at solutions is at least as old as Christianity. Possibly all the way back to mesopotamia.
You probably won't get a lot to support that idea on the literature.