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1823 Seot. 11
Deontology Sanctions
1
Analytic view
 
1 fictitious 2. religious. 3 moral
4. physical. 5. retribution. 6. antipathetic 7. sympathetic
 
Considered in respect of its effects or tendency a sanction
may be termed an inducement: a motive when the tendency is to give birth
to positive <gap/> i.e to motion in some direction a restriction where the tendency is <gap/> to produce the negative
of action &#x2014; not through
forbearance, in opposition
to whatever inducement
may be in operation in
the other <gap/> is the
character of motives.
 
Considered in respect of the nature of the sensation by which
they are constituted, sanctions are of two sorts &#x2014; painful
and pleasurable: considered as in an applied state punitive and remunerative. the painful
first mentioned as being most efficient and universally ap[plicable
and applying
 
Considered in respect of their <gap/> they exhibit the
distinctions following.
 
1. The pain or pleasure in question may be considered as
resulting or apprehended eventually expected to have place
applying either with or without or with the intervention of a
sensitive and intelligent agent: in the first case the sanction
may be stated purely physical or for shortness physical: in the
other case, voluntary or volitional
 
2. The pain or the pleasure if when the sanction is volitional may be
considered as about eventually resulting or eventually expected to be applied by an a voluntary agent of a known
and continually seen species, or by a voluntary agent of an unknown and never seen species.
 
in the first <gap/> or may be termed the <gap/> sanction may be termed
voluntary and natural or in one word <gap/>; in the other case
natural; in the other, super natural: in the first case
case hyperphysical, supernatural superhuman or religious.
 
3





Revision as of 08:46, 6 October 2017

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1823 Seot. 11 Deontology Sanctions 1 Analytic view

1 fictitious 2. religious. 3 moral 4. physical. 5. retribution. 6. antipathetic 7. sympathetic

Considered in respect of its effects or tendency a sanction may be termed an inducement: a motive when the tendency is to give birth to positive i.e to motion in some direction a restriction where the tendency is to produce the negative of action — not through forbearance, in opposition to whatever inducement may be in operation in the other is the character of motives.

Considered in respect of the nature of the sensation by which they are constituted, sanctions are of two sorts — painful and pleasurable: considered as in an applied state punitive and remunerative. the painful first mentioned as being most efficient and universally ap[plicable and applying

Considered in respect of their they exhibit the distinctions following.

1. The pain or pleasure in question may be considered as resulting or apprehended eventually expected to have place applying either with or without or with the intervention of a sensitive and intelligent agent: in the first case the sanction may be stated purely physical or for shortness physical: in the other case, voluntary or volitional

2. The pain or the pleasure if when the sanction is volitional may be considered as about eventually resulting or eventually expected to be applied by an a voluntary agent of a known and continually seen species, or by a voluntary agent of an unknown and never seen species.

in the first or may be termed the sanction may be termed voluntary and natural or in one word ; in the other case natural; in the other, super natural: in the first case case hyperphysical, supernatural superhuman or religious.

3




Identifier: | JB/014/277/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 14.

Date_1

1823-09-11

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

014

Main Headings

deontology

Folio number

277

Info in main headings field

deontology

Image

001

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

c1

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

5040

Box Contents

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