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<p>25</p> | |||
<p><add>Infamy. Forfeiture of Reputation</add></p> | |||
<p>rest which no <add>possible</add> superiority of learning could give<lb/> | |||
a man at present. <hi rend="underline"><foreign>Ipse dixit</foreign></hi> is an expression<lb/> | |||
that took its rise front the blind obsequiousness<lb/> | |||
of the disciples of Pythagoras: and not<lb/> | |||
ill characteristic of the manner of thinking<lb/> | |||
of those who pretended to make any use of<lb/> | |||
their thinking faculty throughout antient Greece.</p> | |||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
25
Infamy. Forfeiture of Reputation
rest which no possible superiority of learning could give
a man at present. Ipse dixit is an expression
that took its rise front the blind obsequiousness
of the disciples of Pythagoras: and not
ill characteristic of the manner of thinking
of those who pretended to make any use of
their thinking faculty throughout antient Greece.
Identifier: | JB/141/118/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 141. |
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141 |
rationale of punishment |
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118 |
infamy forfeiture of reputation |
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001 |
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text sheet |
2 |
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recto |
[[page_numbering::f21 / [page number deleted]]] |
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jeremy bentham |
l v g |
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48335 |
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