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Wrongs H J ??
Ch. Universal Jurisprudence
(1 §. Remedies
§. Remedies
Astrea. From wrongs come we now to remedies.
But for remedies, useless would be the knowledge of the
wrongs which human nature is able so contemptable to committ, and
liable to suffer
Wrongs are the diseases of the body public.
remedies apply as well to these The diseases of
the body natural has these remedies: the disease of the
body politic has theirs. What to this Felicia
The doctrine of Offences/knowledge of the nature and general side is to have what the knowl Morley
is to Madison. The knowledge of it the nature and sorts of Remedies
is what these
is to Milkmen From
this parallel practical
use of no small importance
may be derived
See below Ch. §§.
Felicia, what say you
as to the relation between
wrongs and remedies?
Felicia. I say that every wrong ought to have
its remedy: or rather its collection of remedies. For
sort are many are the cases in which for one
and the same wrong is susceptible of and presents a demand
for all the remedies which the nature of man and
law admitts of. My laboratory contains the above
and there are four sorts of the: and they are all
of them remedies to four sorts.
Astrea. Good and we shall I will call upon you for
them presently. Mean time what says Gubernia to them?
Gubernia. I say no matter whether Whatever
they may be, the wrong may be and whatever no matter with whether the wrong whatever it
be has or had all all or has them or has them not: has them
all or any of them. I deal them out all or none
of them as I please.
Dolosa. Oh yes every wrong has its remedy. Ask
Blackstone else: and for every wrong one remedy is quite sufficient.
Agree, ask Blackstone else.
Gubernia. Nay Judges give remedies for whatever wrongs they
and I please to give: and they deny remedies for whatever wrongs
they and I please they should be denied the Breach of trust is a wrong, if any thing be so Generally speaking, they give no
remedy for breach of trust. Non-restitution of a thing counterfeitly
taken is a wrong if any thing be so: they Generally speaking no such restitution the
thing came to be made. Instead of it they give a sum of money which may
be to any amount whatever the value of it to the person from whom, or the person by whom it was
unlawfully taken.
Identifier: | JB/031/209/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 31.
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1828-09-28 |
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031 |
civil code |
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209 |
wrongs blackstone |
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001 |
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text sheet |
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recto |
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jeremy bentham |
b&m 1828 |
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arthur moore; richard doane |
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1828 |
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9895 |
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