★ 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
5
B III Ch. 3
Infamy
his life, at least for a considerable length of
time: and as the occasions on which it make take break out
from place are various, it may is liable to be seen by a variety
of people.
In point of popularity it cannot be excelled.
For what objection can the people have to
a man's being punished in this matt manner
[whey they themselves are the] when all that
is done to them him is the giving them notice
that within the bounds which the Law allows they may themselves may punish him as
they please: when they themselves are both judges and executioners?
The effect of this upon mode of a punishment of this
kind is measured by two circumstances; the
that which I may be called its extent: the extent
of the infamy a man is subjected to produced in the other its The first
that of extent: the extent of the infamy a man
is subjected to: the other that of intensity. The
degree of infamy a man is subjected to may be
said to be more or less extensive, as the number
of persons in who in the good opinion he is tbe
who are thereby disposed to bear ill will towards
him is greater or less. It may be said to be
more or less intense, as the degree of ill will each
person is disposed to bear to him is greater or
less.
A certain degree of infamy it is obvious must
naturally result from upon a conviction of for and offence
which
Identifier: | JB/141/114/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 141.
|
|||
---|---|---|---|
not numbered |
|||
141 |
rationale of punishment |
||
114 |
infamy |
||
001 |
notes |
||
text sheet |
4 |
||
recto |
f5 / f6 / f7 / f8 |
||
jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::l v g propatria [britannia motif]]] |
||
caroline vernon |
|||
48331 |
|||