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Civil Introd. 2
Damage to a man's person is susceptible of
the shapes following, viz:
1. Simple per corporal sufferance damage: including
simple corporal sufferance, and the absence or privation of this or
that particular lot of corporal enjoyment.
2. Simple mental sufferance: including simple mental
sufferance and the absence or privation of this or that
particular lot of simple mental enjoyment.
3. Irreparable corporal damage damage, divisible again
into disablement, disfigurement, disablement and
mutilation.
4. Coercion in general – divisible again into restraint
and constraint.
5. Coercion with reference to the faculty of loco-motion:
divisible into banishment and confinement,
of which latter imprisonment is a particular
modification.
6. Death.
Personal security or security for or in relation to a mans
person is accordingly susceptible in the first instance of the
six fore just mentioned distinctions or modifications.
The absence of coercion is called liberty: which
in the present instance ought to be some epithet such as personal, to
distinguish it from other political advantages of a very different nature which
are in use to be confounded with one with another
under the cover of the same name,(a) (a) Constitutional liberty and international liberty, of both which farther on. Under the
head of personal security or security for or in relation to person, is
included personal liberty, security for or in
relation to personal liberty.
Identifier: | JB/100/174/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 100.
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100 |
civil code |
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174 |
civil introd |
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001 |
note |
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1 |
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recto |
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jeremy bentham |
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32190 |
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