★ 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
C Of Simple Personal Injuries
-ishment in point of certainty: which therefore in
in order to outweigh the profit of the offence according
to Rule I the 1st rule of proportion
must according to the 1st explanation of that rule
be made up in point of the way of magnitude.
See Introd. Ch. [of the proportion &c] In ordinary cases
when a man has received an injury of this
sort he knows whom he received it from. He
knows whom he is to accuse, and so long as the
law is open to him is certain of redress. But
if the offender can contrive to conceal himself
he trespasses with impunity, and the law is of
no avail. He might therefore to be to drive
To prevent its appearing to him advisable
upon the whole to employ such artifices, it
is requisite therefore to terrify him with the
prospect of an extraordinary degree of punishment
in the case event of their proving ineffectual
Quest. XVI
Why the circumstance of disguise is distinguished
in the punishment from other modes
methods of concealment?
Reasons.
1. Because in some many cases it will be apt to add in
a particular manner to the terror. A piece of black crape
Identifier: | JB/071/024/004 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 71.
|
|||
---|---|---|---|
071 |
penal code |
||
024 |
of simple personal injuries reasons |
||
004 |
|||
text sheet |
4 |
||
recto |
f5 / f6 / f7 / f8 |
||
jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::s. lay [britannia with shield motif]]] |
||
alexander mavrokordatos |
|||
23427 |
|||