★ Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts
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>C <lb/>Forfeiture of Reputation.</head> | |||
<p>5. A fifth expedient by which the moral sanction is<lb/> | |||
called upon in a manner still more express to <del>execute<lb/> | |||
an ordinance of the political [sovereign]</del> <del>execute</del> <add>enforce<lb/> | |||
political ordinance</add> is by <del>moral terms<lb/> | |||
of condemnation</del> censure directly levelled at him whosever<lb/> | |||
he <add>shall prove to</add> be, that shall infringe it. This censure may<lb/> | |||
be levelled at the offender either immediately or else<lb/> | |||
mediately by having <del>levelled</del> <add>immediately pointed</add> at the offence.<hi rend="superscript">(a)</hi></p> | |||
<note>By terms of <unclear>improbation</unclear></note> | |||
<p>Note.</p> | |||
<p | <p><hi rend="superscript">(a)</hi> Of terms of condemnation applied directly to the offence the <hi rend="underline">improbè</hi><lb/> | ||
<hi rend="underline">factum</hi> of the Lex Valeria may serve for an example. "Valeria<lb/> | |||
<p><hi rend="superscript">(a)</hi> Of terms of condemnation applied directly to the offence the <hi rend="underline">improbè</hi> <hi rend="underline">factum</hi> of the Lex Valeria may serve for an example. "Valeria Lex, quum eum qui | Lex, quum eum qui provocâsset virgis codi securique necari<lb/> | ||
<p>The Laws of Greece and Rome afford several examples, where for different offences, the offender is pronounced infamous.</p> | voluisset, siquis adversus ea fecisset, nihil ultra quam<lb/> | ||
<hi rend="underline">improbè factum</hi> adjecit." Livy. L. 10. Ch. 9.</p><!-- This is from Book 10, Chapter 9, Section 5 of Livy's History of Rome. See http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.02.0169%3Abook%3D10%3Achapter%3D9%3Asection%3D5 for a digital text: I copied the version included here as exactly as possible from Bentham's manuscript, but there are many divergences from the Perseus text --> | |||
<p>The Laws of Greece and Rome afford several examples,<lb/> | |||
where for different offences, the offender is pronounced<lb/> | |||
infamous.</p> | |||
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{ | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
C
Forfeiture of Reputation.
5. A fifth expedient by which the moral sanction is
called upon in a manner still more express to execute
an ordinance of the political [sovereign] execute enforce
political ordinance is by moral terms
of condemnation censure directly levelled at him whosever
he shall prove to be, that shall infringe it. This censure may
be levelled at the offender either immediately or else
mediately by having levelled immediately pointed at the offence.(a)
By terms of improbation
Note.
(a) Of terms of condemnation applied directly to the offence the improbè
factum of the Lex Valeria may serve for an example. "Valeria
Lex, quum eum qui provocâsset virgis codi securique necari
voluisset, siquis adversus ea fecisset, nihil ultra quam
improbè factum adjecit." Livy. L. 10. Ch. 9.
The Laws of Greece and Rome afford several examples,
where for different offences, the offender is pronounced
infamous.
Identifier: | JB/141/105/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 141. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
8-9 |
|||
141 |
rationale of punishment |
||
105 |
forfeiture of reputation |
||
001 |
note |
||
copy/fair copy sheet |
2 |
||
recto |
f7 / f8 |
||
[[watermarks::[lion with crown motif]]] |
|||
48322 |
|||