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<head>7</head><lb/><head>C</head><lb/><head>Of Justifications  Reasons</head><lb/> <p>may, the secondary mischief of the attack, has nothing<lb/> to correspond to it in the mischief of the<lb/> defence.  A man's attacking you unlawfully gives<lb/> just reason to those who know of it to apprehend<lb/> that if <add>the injury</add> <del>is</del> be permitted to go unpunished, he or<lb/> others may on some occasion or other inflict<lb/>the <del>lif</del> like on them:  but from any thing you<lb/> do <add>to him</add> with no other view than that of defending<lb/> yourself against such attack no such apprehension<lb/> can possibly arise.</p><lb/>
<head>7</head><lb/><head>C</head><lb/><head>Of Justifications  Reasons</head><lb/>  
<head>Question VII</head><lb/>  <p>Why a party <add>unlawfully</add> attacked, <del>rather than defend</del><lb/> <del>himself</del> is not bound to save himself by yield<del>ing</del><lb/>ground, rather than defend himself.</p><lb/> <head>Reasons</head><lb/>  <p>1.  Because if he were punished under such circumstances<lb/> for defending himself, the punishment<lb/> would <add>not only</add> be groundless; <add>but in every other respect pernicious.</add>  If being attacked you were<lb/> bound to give ground rather than defend yourself,<lb/> this would in effect be putting it in the power<lb/> of your adversary to put you to flight, and<lb/> drive you about wheresoever he met you.  This<lb/> would be giving him a great advantage:  and in<lb/>certain circumstances might put it in his power<lb/> to do you <del><gap/></del> such mischief as might prove<lb/> irreparable:  for it might happen <del>that</del> from a <add>multitude</add></p>  
<p>may, the secondary mischief of the attack, has nothing<lb/> to correspond to it in the mischief of the<lb/> defence.  A man's attacking you unlawfully gives<lb/> just reason to those who know of it to apprehend<lb/> that if <add>the injury</add> <del>is</del> be permitted to go unpunished, he or<lb/> others may on some occasion or other inflict<lb/>the <del>lif</del> like on them:  but from any thing you<lb/> do <add>to him</add> with no other view than that of defending<lb/> yourself against such attack no such apprehension<lb/> can possibly arise.</p>
 
<head>Question VII</head>
 
<p>Why a party <add>unlawfully</add> attacked, <del>rather than defend</del><lb/> <del>himself</del> is not bound to save himself by yield<del>ing</del><lb/>ground, rather than defend himself.</p><lb/> <head>Reasons</head><lb/>   
<p>1.  Because if he were punished under such circumstances<lb/> for defending himself, the punishment<lb/> would <add>not only</add> be groundless; <add>but in every other respect pernicious.</add>  If being attacked you were<lb/> bound to give ground rather than defend yourself,<lb/> this would in effect be putting it in the power<lb/> of your adversary to put you to flight, and<lb/> drive you about wheresoever he met you.  This<lb/> would be giving him a great advantage:  and in<lb/>certain circumstances might put it in his power<lb/> to do you <del><gap/></del> such mischief as might prove<lb/> irreparable:  for it might happen <del>that</del> from a <add>multitude</add></p>  
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7
C
Of Justifications Reasons

may, the secondary mischief of the attack, has nothing
to correspond to it in the mischief of the
defence. A man's attacking you unlawfully gives
just reason to those who know of it to apprehend
that if the injury is be permitted to go unpunished, he or
others may on some occasion or other inflict
the lif like on them: but from any thing you
do to him with no other view than that of defending
yourself against such attack no such apprehension
can possibly arise.

Question VII

Why a party unlawfully attacked, rather than defend
himself is not bound to save himself by yielding
ground, rather than defend himself.


Reasons

1. Because if he were punished under such circumstances
for defending himself, the punishment
would not only be groundless; but in every other respect pernicious. If being attacked you were
bound to give ground rather than defend yourself,
this would in effect be putting it in the power
of your adversary to put you to flight, and
drive you about wheresoever he met you. This
would be giving him a great advantage: and in
certain circumstances might put it in his power
to do you such mischief as might prove
irreparable: for it might happen that from a multitude


Identifier: | JB/071/006/003"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 71.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

071

Main Headings

penal code

Folio number

006

Info in main headings field

of justifications - reasons

Image

003

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f5 / f6 / f7 / f8

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::s. lay [britannia with shield emblem]]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

alexander mavrokordatos

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

23409

Box Contents

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