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'' | <note>23</note> | ||
<p>The first part of <hi rend="underline">Chrestomathia</hi> was published in 1810 -<lb/> | |||
the second part in the year following - Its principal object<lb/> | |||
was to bring together the several branches of art & science &<lb/> | |||
to exhibit their conduciveness to happiness, - to <del>exhibit</del> <add>point out</add><lb/> | |||
their relationship to each other through this <add>their</add> common<lb/> | |||
property - and to give the whole that direction which as a result<lb/> | |||
should produce the maximization of felicity. It was as early<lb/> | |||
as 1769 that Bentham's mind was occupied with this Topic -<lb/> | |||
Even then he fancied that happiness might be made the<lb/> | |||
common trunk to support all the branches of knowledge - <del>making</del> <add>forming</add><lb/> | |||
together a perfect encyclopedical tree. In Lord Bacon's writing<lb/> | |||
he found planted the pristine tree - it was in some sort<lb/> | |||
improved by D'Alembert, - but neither the English nor the<lb/> | |||
French philosopher had taken any notice of that most <del><gap/></del> <add>useful</add><lb/> | |||
of properties to which all Arts and Sciences tend, & to which alone<lb/> | |||
they are indebted for <del>all the</del> <add>any</add> value they possess. <del><gap/></del> The trees<lb/> | |||
they sought to plant had <add>however</add> never taken root - & in the<lb/> | |||
presence of Bentham's nobler production must be considered as<lb/> | |||
mere cumberers of the ground.</p> | |||
23
The first part of Chrestomathia was published in 1810 -
the second part in the year following - Its principal object
was to bring together the several branches of art & science &
to exhibit their conduciveness to happiness, - to exhibit point out
their relationship to each other through this their common
property - and to give the whole that direction which as a result
should produce the maximization of felicity. It was as early
as 1769 that Bentham's mind was occupied with this Topic -
Even then he fancied that happiness might be made the
common trunk to support all the branches of knowledge - making forming
together a perfect encyclopedical tree. In Lord Bacon's writing
he found planted the pristine tree - it was in some sort
improved by D'Alembert, - but neither the English nor the
French philosopher had taken any notice of that most useful
of properties to which all Arts and Sciences tend, & to which alone
they are indebted for all the any value they possess. The trees
they sought to plant had however never taken root - & in the
presence of Bentham's nobler production must be considered as
mere cumberers of the ground.
Identifier: | JB/014/436/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 14. |
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014 |
deontology |
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436 |
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001 |
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linking material |
1 |
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recto |
f23 |
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sir john bowring |
[[watermarks::[partial fleur de lys motif]]] |
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5199 |
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