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<head>16 Feb. 1830.</head> | |||
<p>Under a government which has <add>in reality for its constant object of pursuit</add> the greatest<lb/>happiness of the <del>greatest number</del>, <add>whole Community</add> the more completely<lb/> and extensively the art and science of government<lb/> is <del>good</del>, <add>understood</add> the less intense and less extensive will<lb/>be all <del>fees</del> all such fears, <del>which</del> <add>as have</add> no other than an<lb/> indefinite object. Where once the stock of appropriate <lb/>knowledge and judgement in relation to the whole of the<lb/> subject matter of that art and science is to a certain degree<lb/> ample, the needlessness of the sort of institution in<lb/> question will be generally felt, and the institution with <add>the</add> useless<lb/> and <del>prominent</del> <add>pernicious</add> delay and compilation attached to it,<lb/> abrogated.</p> | |||
<p>By every addition made to the degree of <unclear>leaness</unclear> of the views<lb/> taken by the public mind of the field of this art and science, the abrogation<lb/> of this and all the other useless and thence pernicious matter<lb/> will be of course accelerated. If those to <add>whose minds</add> <del>whom all relevant</del> <add>all means of judging</add> <del>particulars</del><lb/> are continually present have as favourbale an opinion of their own<lb/> constitution as the stranger has by whom these pages are penned, neither<lb/> will this, nor any of those other institutions which are here <del>brought</del> <add>held up</add> to view in the character of uselessness, continue long unabrogated.</p> | |||
<p></p> | |||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} |
16 Feb. 1830.
Under a government which has in reality for its constant object of pursuit the greatest
happiness of the greatest number, whole Community the more completely
and extensively the art and science of government
is good, understood the less intense and less extensive will
be all fees all such fears, which as have no other than an
indefinite object. Where once the stock of appropriate
knowledge and judgement in relation to the whole of the
subject matter of that art and science is to a certain degree
ample, the needlessness of the sort of institution in
question will be generally felt, and the institution with the useless
and prominent pernicious delay and compilation attached to it,
abrogated.
By every addition made to the degree of leaness of the views
taken by the public mind of the field of this art and science, the abrogation
of this and all the other useless and thence pernicious matter
will be of course accelerated. If those to whose minds whom all relevant all means of judging particulars
are continually present have as favourbale an opinion of their own
constitution as the stranger has by whom these pages are penned, neither
will this, nor any of those other institutions which are here brought held up to view in the character of uselessness, continue long unabrogated.
Identifier: | JB/044/125/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 44. |
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1830-02-16 |
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044 |
constitutional code |
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125 |
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001 |
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copy/fair copy sheet |
1 |
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recto |
c6 / f51 |
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13910 |
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