★ Find a new page on our Untranscribed Manuscripts list.
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
<head>1824. August 25. | <head>1824. August 25.</head><lb/><head>Contitutional Code</head><note>Ch. IV. Sovereignty in whom</note><p>Ch. IV. Sovereignty, in whom.<lb/><lb/>Whatsoever be the powers<lb/>proposed to be exercised<lb/>by them, this proof of<lb/>moral aptitude, applies as<lb/>much to one such power<lb/>as to another. Each will<lb/>always wish to serve<lb/>all others, so far as by so<lb/>doing, he will serve himself:<lb/>and by maximizing<lb/>equality, each will serve<lb/>himself, in so far as the<lb/>others will willingly<lb/>assist him.</p><p>II. Monarch morally inapt.<lb/>II. Monarch's case.<lb/>What, as above, every man<lb/>desires and endeavors to<lb/>do, namely, place at his<lb/>own disposal all the<lb/>matter of subsistence<lb/>and abundance, and<lb/>all the means of security,<lb/>the Monarch, by the<lb/>supposition, has the<lb/>power to do: so therefore,<lb/>in so far as the nature<lb/>of men & things renders<lb/>it possible, he accordingly<lb/>will always do: &<lb/>this, at the expence of<lb/>the subsistence, abundance<lb/>and security of<lb/>all others: and to the<lb/>destruction of all Equality<lb/>as between those others<lb/>and himself.</p><p>The abundance and<lb/>security of all others<lb/>he will moreover<lb/>diminish for the augmentation<lb/>of the felicity of<lb/>all, by the augmentation<lb/>of whose felicity, his<lb/>own is any way encreased.<lb/>He</p><pb/>Ch. IV. Sovereignty, in whom.<lb/><lb/>He will sacrifice the<lb/>happiness of all others,<lb/>not only to his own pleasures,<lb/>but to the pleasures<lb/>of all, from the<lb/>encrease of whose pleasures,<lb/>his own receive<lb/>encrease.<p>In so far as a man<lb/>has need of employing<lb/>the matter of reward,<lb/>no man can encrease<lb/>his own pleasures,<lb/>without encreasing<lb/>those of the persons he<lb/>rewards.</p><p>A monarch's as well<lb/>as every other man's<lb/>felicity, depends partly<lb/>upon the natural state<lb/>of his own mind, partly<lb/>upon the state of other<lb/>external objects by which<lb/>it is influenced.</p><p>Another division of<lb/>the aggregate of the<lb/>external elements of<lb/>felicity in each man's<lb/>instance, into the<lb/>following.<lb/>1. Matter of wealth, for<lb/>shortness, called money.<lb/>2. Money's worth: composed<lb/>of human services:<lb/>Services of all sorts by<lb/>which man ministers<lb/>to the pleasure of man,<lb/>or to his exemption from<lb/>pain.<lb/>3. Power — the principal<lb/>means of obtaining<lb/>those Services<lb/>4. Amity of others,<lb/>another means.</p><pb/>Ch. IV. Sovereignty, in whom.<lb/><lb/>5. Reputation: Synonyms,<lb/>Respect, esteem,<lb/>estimation, distinction:<lb/>Synonyms, but<lb/>with shades of difference.<lb/>6. Ease, i.e. exemption<lb/>from unpleasant<lb/>exertion.<lb/>7. In case of irritation,<lb/>vengeance.<p>Of all these, each man<lb/>desires the maximum:<lb/>the Monarch, and he<lb/>alone possesses it.<lb/>But none of these<lb/>can the Monarch possess<lb/>the maximum,<lb/>but at the expence of<lb/>all other men.</p><p>Supposing the Monarch,<lb/>as such, has any official<lb/>duty — a supposition<lb/>which he will<lb/>sometimes deny, sometimes<lb/><sic>admitt</sic>, the maximum<lb/>of it can not<lb/>be enjoyed, but at the<lb/>expence of that duty.<lb/>Of vengeance, he can<lb/>not enjoy the maximum,<lb/>but at the expence<lb/>of justice: at the<lb/>expence of greatly<lb/>preponderant pain to those<lb/>from whose pain the<lb/>pleasure of it is reaped<lb/>by him yet this pernicious<lb/>ease & pernicious<lb/>vengeance, every<lb/>Monarch has, as such<lb/>the power of taking,<lb/>every Monarch is, and<lb/>ever will be, in the habit<lb/>of taking continually.</p> | ||
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
1824. August 25.
Contitutional CodeCh. IV. Sovereignty in whom
Ch. IV. Sovereignty, in whom.
Whatsoever be the powers
proposed to be exercised
by them, this proof of
moral aptitude, applies as
much to one such power
as to another. Each will
always wish to serve
all others, so far as by so
doing, he will serve himself:
and by maximizing
equality, each will serve
himself, in so far as the
others will willingly
assist him.
II. Monarch morally inapt.
II. Monarch's case.
What, as above, every man
desires and endeavors to
do, namely, place at his
own disposal all the
matter of subsistence
and abundance, and
all the means of security,
the Monarch, by the
supposition, has the
power to do: so therefore,
in so far as the nature
of men & things renders
it possible, he accordingly
will always do: &
this, at the expence of
the subsistence, abundance
and security of
all others: and to the
destruction of all Equality
as between those others
and himself.
The abundance and
security of all others
he will moreover
diminish for the augmentation
of the felicity of
all, by the augmentation
of whose felicity, his
own is any way encreased.
He
---page break---
Ch. IV. Sovereignty, in whom.
He will sacrifice the
happiness of all others,
not only to his own pleasures,
but to the pleasures
of all, from the
encrease of whose pleasures,
his own receive
encrease.
In so far as a man
has need of employing
the matter of reward,
no man can encrease
his own pleasures,
without encreasing
those of the persons he
rewards.
A monarch's as well
as every other man's
felicity, depends partly
upon the natural state
of his own mind, partly
upon the state of other
external objects by which
it is influenced.
Another division of
the aggregate of the
external elements of
felicity in each man's
instance, into the
following.
1. Matter of wealth, for
shortness, called money.
2. Money's worth: composed
of human services:
Services of all sorts by
which man ministers
to the pleasure of man,
or to his exemption from
pain.
3. Power — the principal
means of obtaining
those Services
4. Amity of others,
another means.
---page break---
Ch. IV. Sovereignty, in whom.
5. Reputation: Synonyms,
Respect, esteem,
estimation, distinction:
Synonyms, but
with shades of difference.
6. Ease, i.e. exemption
from unpleasant
exertion.
7. In case of irritation,
vengeance.
Of all these, each man
desires the maximum:
the Monarch, and he
alone possesses it.
But none of these
can the Monarch possess
the maximum,
but at the expence of
all other men.
Supposing the Monarch,
as such, has any official
duty — a supposition
which he will
sometimes deny, sometimes
admitt, the maximum
of it can not
be enjoyed, but at the
expence of that duty.
Of vengeance, he can
not enjoy the maximum,
but at the expence
of justice: at the
expence of greatly
preponderant pain to those
from whose pain the
pleasure of it is reaped
by him yet this pernicious
ease & pernicious
vengeance, every
Monarch has, as such
the power of taking,
every Monarch is, and
ever will be, in the habit
of taking continually.
Identifier: | JB/038/218/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 38. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
1824-08-25 |
not numbered |
||
038 |
constitutional code |
||
218 |
constitutional code |
||
001 |
ch. iv sovereignty in whom |
||
marginal summary sheet |
1 |
||
recto |
e3 |
||
john flowerdew colls |
|||
11855 |
|||