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Judicial Estab.
that the degree in which they deserve it should be
services it is productive should be put in the two
cases pretty much upon a par in the two cases
& in the two cases should bear a considerable resemblance.
The dark regimen I have spoken of, however, it will
occur is not of the essence of the institution. The
light of publicity would accordingly beyond a doubt
afford a remedy in some degree or other to this
or to almost every other political inconvenience. But the
remedy which even the principle could afford would
could not be otherwise than an end inadequate one.
Those necessary The official advocates The degree of exertion made
by those necessary advocates could never be upon a
par with that used by voluntary ones: the degree
of intelligence would not in as far as intelligence
depends upon exertion which it does in so great a
measure. There would be between the two sorts classes of
that disparity which is the necessary result where
action exertion has on the one side no other competent motive principle
the impellent principle is on the one side fear of
punishment the other hope of reward: the punishment
distant slight and faintly probable, the reward instant
immediate and accumulating. Punishment Fear
draws
Identifier: | JB/051/402/003 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 51.
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[[marginal_summary_numbering::15-20 [all deleted]]] |
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051 |
evidence; procedure code |
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402 |
judicial establishment obs. |
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003 |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f3 / f4 / f5 / f6 |
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jeremy bentham |
l munn |
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benjamin constant |
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16567 |
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