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JB/030/001/001

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1822 March
Civil Code

Form

Pannomion its branches
1. Constitutive
2. Operative
Operative branch its next branches
1. Penal
2. Civil or Distributive
Subjects of Distributive
1. Benefits (good)
2. Burthens (evil)
Benefits are rights
Burthens are obligations
Subject matters of rights are
1. Material or say really
existing 1. Things
2. Persons
2. Immaterial or say
fictitious entities: viz.
1. All-comprehensive
2. Rights / Beneficient
good
2. Obligations (burthensome
evil)
Under the greatest happiness
sole justification
for imposing establishing obligations
establishing
conferring.

Obligations and as well as Rights
have their the efficient causes
and whatever is the efficient
cause of a sanctioned
right
is the
efficient cause of a
correspondent set of
obligations.

Title is used with
relation to rights
but not with relation
to obligations.
Rights are
1. Unsanctioned or say
or unarmed
2. Sanctioned: viz. by exhibition
of corresponding obligations.

Matter or Substance.

Subsistence and abundance
are the result
of the labour of individuals:
of under inducements
which have place without
need of law.

What the law does for
promoting them is by
1. Providing security for
of the labourer and the
fruits of that labour in
his hand and in do
of those to which it
has been transferred.
2. Maximizing practical
equality: in the
sense that no man
should ruin good benefit
from burthen evil to a preponderant
amount suffered
by others.

Subject matters of Distribution
Good and evil
Benefit and burthen
Benefit by means of the
burthen.
Burthens for the sake of the
benefit.
1. Subject matters of distribution.
2. General means of distribution
3. Occasions of distribution
4. Means of distribution
according to the several occasions.
Benefits are conferred
by the rendering of services.
Services 1. active or passive
2. .
Accounts or occasions on
which rendering of
services is made obligatory.
Note Compensation for damage
with or without injury done
by the compensation—one occasion
or .
Benefits recoverable 1.
without demands 2. on
demand.

Form
Obligations are
1. applying to the active
faculty
2. applying to passive
faculty
Obligation applying to the
active faculty is
1.—do to exercise positive
acts.
2. do to exercise
acts.
Power and Right.
They are not exactly
synonymous and on every
occasion .
To have a right is in
most cases to have a
correspondent power:
but not in all.

Faculty to on which an
obligation applies are
1. Active
2. Passive.
Obligations
1. Compulsory.
2. .
Where the obligation is
instructive though the
agent person of the obligation be
complied with is passive,
the faculty on which it bears
is the active do.

In a sensitive being
the passive faculty to which
the obligation applies may be
1. the instructive do
2. the the sensitive.


Ordo for Pen. & Civil
Begin with Penal
Corporeal &c.
Thus to Civil and Particular
Codes post off the
exceptions constituted by
Persons to public and private
functionaries for private
refer to Offs ag. Condition in life.

Then before or after offs
against reputation proceed to
Offences against property.
From that title in
Penal Code refer to Civil
Code as containing the
matter.

I. End in view.
1. End in view or object
of pursuit in this Code.
2. Do in all other Codes.
II. Expository matter.
Jurisprudential fictitious
entities. 1. exposition of
in logical order.
2. Do in alphabetical order
in an appropriate Index.
III. Axioms.
Quere—here or before the
Relations between Deontology
and Posology.

Another inducement
self-regarding—augmentation
of his own happiness felicity.

Yet distinterested, just as
playing at chess is disinterested.

Thus is Deontology public.
At times he occupies himself
with do private.
This above the general description
of the aggregate of
his inducement.

2. His three inducements
in detail. 1. Pleasure of sympathy
on the largest scale.
2. Pleasure of power. 3.
Pleasure of reputation.
Say I Jeremy Bentham
now in the 73d year of age
ago wrote as follows



Identifier: | JB/030/001/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 30.

Date_1

1822-03-01

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

030

Main Headings

civil code

Folio number

001

Info in main headings field

civil code

Image

001

Titles

Category

rudiments sheet (brouillon)

Number of Pages

2

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::i&m [prince of wales feathers] 1818]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

arthur wellesley, duke of wellington

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1818

Notes public

ID Number

9508

Box Contents

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