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Furnishing an answer, or silence the what is equivalent, an
act of rash silence a negative act, the of a capable of having for its
effect of which by or speech may be produced
an opinion which may have for which the of which the ultimate consequence may be the infliction of
punishment suffered in some shape or other form suffered by him from whom the answer is thus answer or the
furnished, is is evidentious silence is thus extracted is a sort of operation not very likely
it is true, to be a pleasant one. But the punishment itself is much more
unpleasant. Good for the exclusion of the probable cause or possible or in what degree soever,
the reason would be still better for the exclusion of the effect.
Good for the exclusion of the unpleasant


1824. Jany. 25
Constitutional Procedure CodeCh. Evidence Rules
§. Exclusion

(b) To corruption in part, to confusion of mind
an other part may the exclusion in their cause be refused.
Where shall that person be found who is less Who is less likely that the person interrogated to delivery testimony
by which truth is violated to his prejudice? Apt tenderness
to the person interrogated is here the pretence more
consistent and less flagrantly absurd would the exclusion would be that
which should be
if applied to all mankind besides.

To the guilty alone can this rule be productive of any advantage:
to the not on guilty it is useless: they have no need of it.
To them it is even
worse than useless:
for it precludes them
from being subjected
to a test a test the only
test by which their
non-guiltiness could
compleatly be established.

Accordingly where
you see an man making
use of this rule, you may stand
assured that something some act
or other which is treated
on the footing of a guilty
one, has been performed
either by himself or
by some person to whom
he is labouring to
give support.

A rule the meaning of which if in the mind of
the curators it ever had any clear meaning has been clouded
and distorted by the wording is commonly employed in giving color in
their practice this case to the exclusionary practice. In
Later non-parties system – the English
no man is bound to accuse himself. Part answers to
But as to accusation there is no such thing in this case has nothing to do with the matter is foreign to has no part in
the case. Accusation is or may be a spontaneous act: responsive
accusation a quite different one. Response is a to by which the trouble Response is an operation
is a non spontaneous act. Accusation thus applied is a accusation a quite different one. Response is a non-spontaneous
act: accusation a spontaneous act.
mere figure of speech: one of the instruments of deception
employed by that branch branch of the art of misrepresentation
which is termed rhetoric.




Identifier: | JB/055/161/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 55.

Date_1

1824-01-31

Marginal Summary Numbering

[[marginal_summary_numbering::13 or 1 - 17 [or] 5]]

Box

055

Main Headings

Constitutional Code; Procedure Code

Folio number

161

Info in main headings field

Procedure Code

Image

001

Titles

Category

Text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

D9 / E1

Penner

Watermarks

J WHATMAN TURKEY MILL 1823

Marginals

Jeremy Bentham

Paper Producer

Jonathan Blenman

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1823

Notes public

ID Number

17882

Box Contents

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