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<p>14</p>
''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet''
<p><head>Analogy.</head></p>
 
<p>arbitrary in their eyes.  In a word, the <del>var</del> less in danger<lb/>
 
will it <del>app</del> be of disgust <add>giving them disgust</add>:  the <del>more</del> <add>greater</add> chance will<lb/>
 
it [even] have of even affording them a kind of satisfaction <add>article of merit then</add>.  This comes to neither more nor less than<lb/>
the quality of Popularity which [a mode of Punishment<lb/>
conspicuous for its <add><unclear>concerned</unclear> on the score of</add> analogy is particularly apt<lb/>
on account of this very <add>latter</add> Property to possess.] is particularly<lb/>
apt to arise out of the other.  The people in comparing<lb/>
the offence with the punishment discover what they call<lb/>
a reason for the latter:  which [reason] is no more than a<lb/>
circumstance that tends [<add>but</add> upon principles they do not examine<lb/>
into] to dispose them to relish such a punishment<lb/>
when <add>they see it</add> annexed to such a crime.</p>
<p>The identify of a <add>any</add> circumstance in the <add>offence and</add> punishment<lb/>
constitutes what may be called a <add><hi rend="underline">real</hi> or</add> genuine <del>or legitimate</del><lb/>
analogy.  A <add><del>case of</del></add> spurious <add><hi rend="underline">verbal</hi> kind of</add> analogy may be<lb/>
held up <add>exhibited</add> whenever occasion can be taken to one <add>use</add> a<lb/>
<hi rend="underline">word</hi> on the description of the one which can be<lb/>
applied to the description of the other:  and this although<lb/>
it be employ'd in different senses or the two<lb/>
occasions <add>cases</add>:  literally is the one and metaphorically one<lb/>
the other.<hi rend="superscript">[a]</hi>  <del>D</del></p>
<p><head>NOTE</head></p>
<p><hi rend="superscript">[a]</hi>  Lord Coke speaking of the punishment for High Treason<lb/>
<del>that his body</del> <add>claims that it is</add> proper the "body, lands, goods, posterity<lb/>
"&amp;c..." of a Traytor..." should be <hi rend="underline">torn</hi>, pulled asunder and<lb/>
<hi rend="underline">destroyed</hi> <del>as</del> because "he intended to <hi rend="underline">tear and destroy</hi> the Majesty</p>
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Revision as of 03:08, 29 August 2021

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14

Analogy.

arbitrary in their eyes. In a word, the var less in danger
will it app be of disgust giving them disgust: the more greater chance will
it [even] have of even affording them a kind of satisfaction article of merit then. This comes to neither more nor less than
the quality of Popularity which [a mode of Punishment
conspicuous for its concerned on the score of analogy is particularly apt
on account of this very latter Property to possess.] is particularly
apt to arise out of the other. The people in comparing
the offence with the punishment discover what they call
a reason for the latter: which [reason] is no more than a
circumstance that tends [but upon principles they do not examine
into] to dispose them to relish such a punishment
when they see it annexed to such a crime.

The identify of a any circumstance in the offence and punishment
constitutes what may be called a real or genuine or legitimate
analogy. A case of spurious verbal kind of analogy may be
held up exhibited whenever occasion can be taken to one use a
word on the description of the one which can be
applied to the description of the other: and this although
it be employ'd in different senses or the two
occasions cases: literally is the one and metaphorically one
the other.[a] D

NOTE

[a] Lord Coke speaking of the punishment for High Treason
that his body claims that it is proper the "body, lands, goods, posterity
"&c..." of a Traytor..." should be torn, pulled asunder and
destroyed as because "he intended to tear and destroy the Majesty


Identifier: | JB/159/129/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 159.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

not numbered

Box

159

Main Headings

punishment

Folio number

129

Info in main headings field

analogy

Image

002

Titles

analogy subservient to reformation / analogy real & verbal

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f13 / f14 / f15 / f16

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::l v g propatria [britannia motif]]]

Marginals

jeremy bentham

Paper Producer

caroline vernon

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

53952

Box Contents

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