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5 Oct. 1814 13
Logic
Deontology
Ch. Pleasures of Amity
(1) 9
Unbending — or as the phrase is cringing, fawning
to his superiors, the same man is stiff and even insolent
to his inferiors. Nothing is more frequently observed: nothing
more natural: for the suffering, to which he subjects
himself in the one case be makes amends by the
enjoyments of the same kind which he gives
himself in the other.
23
Fawning to his superior
the same man
insolent to his
inferior; for the
suffering received
from the one, he
makes amends by
the same enjoyment
derived from the other.
At the same time by send proportion to the gratification
he thus affords to his subservient of pride, he provokes
enmity and through enmity ill offices, and through ill
offices the sufferings of which in its unaquiction clumps they are
capable of being the cause. B
24
At the same time
by gratifying pride
he provokes ill offices
and the sufferings
they cause.
By these gratifications self-indulgence in this shape is he upon the whole of the
account a loser or a gainer? On which
side the balance is ask depends partly upon taste individualistic
taste — partly upon accident.
25
By these gratifications
does he
gain or lose? This
depends on taste
or accident.
Identifier: | JB/014/165/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 14.
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23-25 |
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deontology |
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165 |
logic |
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c1 / d13 / e9 |
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jeremy bentham |
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