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15 Feby 1808
Setting aside the case of natural slowness as above,
if this be a situation in which the multitude of counsellors
is in the line of judicature a cause of safety, it is that
of an appellate or otherwise superordinate judicatory. It
is in that case situation that the disadvantages of attendant in many seated judicatories
are at their minimum, the advantages at their
maximum.
In this case situation all suits which afford neither (sitting aside the encouragement given
doubt nor to malâ fide appeals of which n another place† † Infra.) every suit which from in the whole of its
nature affords not matter of doubt or difficulty is disposed
of below without ever coming presenting itself to the cognizance of
the Court above: so likewise in a cause that has its difficulties,
every point but the particular point out of which
the difficulties arise. The immediate the single-seated judicatory is a
sieve by which all the causes and points of a course and
ordinary texture are kept back, none but those which have a certain degree something of refinement and subtlety in their nature passing through to the
appellate judicatory.
Identifier: | JB/091/229/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 91.
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1808-02-15 |
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091 |
scotch reform |
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229 |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
c6 / d23 |
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jeremy bentham |
th 1806 |
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andre morellet |
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1806 |
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29225 |
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