★ Keep up to date with the latest news - subscribe to the Transcribe Bentham newsletter; Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts
1
Ch. 1 Beginning
(1 §.1
Object. 2. . 3 Blackstone the
with information and adverse to most
course that on each occasion can be taken in consideration of what on
that occasion the state appears to be.
This work has for its
Ch. 1. Titles
[§.1.] Universal jurisprudence — Law as it ought to be — Law as it is.
Law as it pretends to be.[+] [[+] i.e. professes to be
and is not. 2] Right legal — Right moral —Obligation
benefit — burthen — Command — Mandative — Prohibitive, Inhibitive
Power — Possession — Ownership. Trust — trustee, intended benefiter,
Trustor —
Universal Jurisprudence.
Law as it ought to be, as
it is & pretends to be, now
thro' these pages.
Universal Jurisprudence. Law as it ought
to be Law as it is.. [incidentally, Law as it pretends
to be. + + This, how is law set
down? all these three hopes go throughout the
course of these pages all these hopes go on hand in
hand, and under to one or other of them, whatever is seen occurs
will be seen to be referable
Universal jurisprudence
what — It has for its
subject the discourses of
persons of all ages
Universal jurisprudence — readers, be not frightened
at these words — a name there must be for every thing that
is spoken of, and by under this appellation whatever will be seen
placed under it, has been characterized designated/placed by those who have
taken it for the subject their instruction/the instruction undertaken to be delivered by them
written about it. But the sort of discourse which the talk which this same
magnificently sounding service has for its subject — what
is it? It is that sort of discourse which to every person
of both sexes, and of every eye beyond that of the earliest
infancy the substance at least is as familiar as every other that it ever
happens to him to engage in: a few times more and you
will see whether this is not strictly true.
In a play of the man — whatever the principal character —
a tradesman man of trade who late in life took a fancy to become a
man of letters, and to have for that purpose a language — Macho, was all astonishment
when informed [where by came to him] at hearing, that he had
had been talking prose
all his life long, without
suspecting any such thing.
This, whoever you are, is what you will find is see is your case in regard to Universal jurisprudence.
Law. Substantive and adjective — principal
& subsidiary — principal and accessary.
Language of Universal Jurisprudence is
language of domestic government of every man's fireside.
Identifier: | JB/031/103/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 31.
|
|||
---|---|---|---|
1828-08-28 |
not numbered |
||
031 |
civil code |
||
103 |
blackstone |
||
001 |
ch. 1 |
||
text sheet |
1 |
||
recto |
d1 / e1 |
||
jeremy bentham |
b&m 1828 |
||
arthur moore; richard doane |
|||
1828 |
|||
9789 |
|||