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<p>1. or 6. Prevention of aristocracy. This is the great<lb/> advantage attributed to it by Blackstone. His<lb/> encomiums on the institution are unbounded: and<lb/> <del>when he comes to give the grou</del> the sole ground<lb/> he builds them on is this supposed <add><unclear>imagitud</unclear> <add>imaginary</add></add> tendency. It is<lb/> altogether an imaginary one. Aristocracy is a vice<lb/> of the laws: what cure can a decision or a<lb/> constant habit of decision upon the question of fact,<lb/> though give by Angels, administer to a vice<lb/> in the laws? <del>It has</del> Judicature by Jury has not<lb/> kept out aristocracy: it is not in its power to keep<lb/> <note>the body of the laws is stained and corrupted and deformed all over by that ugly vice <hi rend='superscript'>(a)</hi></note> out that vice (or any other vice in the laws.<lb/> Impartiality <del>is the</del> Superior impartiality is the<lb/> quality he attributes to the <add>this mode</add> jury<lb/> <add>of</add> judicature: and it is in virtue of this quality<lb/> that it is to <del>attribu</del> be productive of so happy<lb/> an effect. If it really possessed in so eminent<lb/> a degree the property it is thus complimented with,<lb/> the effect of it instead of being what he supposes<lb/> would be exactly the reverse: <del>the</del> impartiality<lb/> is but a modification of integrity, probity integrity<lb/> uprightness: the more upright the judicature, <add>tribunal</add> the <del>more</del><lb/> stricter, the more punctual the execution of the laws.<add>the</add> </p>
<p>1. or 6. Prevention of aristocracy. This is the great<lb/> advantage attributed to it by Blackstone. His<lb/> encomiums on the institution are unbounded: and<lb/> <del>when he comes to give the grou</del> the sole ground<lb/> he builds them on is this supposed <add><unclear>imagitud</unclear> <add>imaginary</add></add> tendency. It is<lb/> altogether an imaginary one. Aristocracy is a vice<lb/> of the laws: what cure can a decision or a<lb/> constant habit of decision upon the question of fact,<lb/> though give by Angels, administer to a vice<lb/> in the laws? <del>It has</del> Judicature by Jury has not<lb/> kept out aristocracy: it is not in its power to keep<lb/> <note>the body of the laws is stained and corrupted and deformed all over by that ugly vice <hi rend='superscript'>(a)</hi></note> out that vice (or any other vice in the laws.<lb/> Impartiality <del>is the</del> Superior impartiality is the<lb/> quality he attributes to the <add>this mode</add> jury<lb/> <add>of</add> judicature: and it is in virtue of this quality<lb/> that it is to <del>attribu</del> be productive of so happy<lb/> an effect. If it really possessed in so eminent<lb/> a degree the property it is thus complimented with,<lb/> the effect of it instead of being what he supposes<lb/> would be exactly the reverse: <del>the</del> impartiality<lb/> is but a modification of integrity, probity integrity<lb/> uprightness: the more upright the <add>tribunal</add> judicature, the <del>more</del><lb/> stricter, the more punctual the execution of the laws.<add>the</add> </p>





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1. or 6. Prevention of aristocracy. This is the great
advantage attributed to it by Blackstone. His
encomiums on the institution are unbounded: and
when he comes to give the grou the sole ground
he builds them on is this supposed imagitud <add>imaginary</add> tendency. It is
altogether an imaginary one. Aristocracy is a vice
of the laws: what cure can a decision or a
constant habit of decision upon the question of fact,
though give by Angels, administer to a vice
in the laws? It has Judicature by Jury has not
kept out aristocracy: it is not in its power to keep
the body of the laws is stained and corrupted and deformed all over by that ugly vice (a) out that vice (or any other vice in the laws.
Impartiality is the Superior impartiality is the
quality he attributes to the this mode jury
of judicature: and it is in virtue of this quality
that it is to attribu be productive of so happy
an effect. If it really possessed in so eminent
a degree the property it is thus complimented with,
the effect of it instead of being what he supposes
would be exactly the reverse: the impartiality
is but a modification of integrity, probity integrity
uprightness: the more upright the tribunal judicature, the more
stricter, the more punctual the execution of the laws.the















Identifier: | JB/035/067/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 35.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

035

Main Headings

constitutional code; evidence; procedure code

Folio number

067

Info in main headings field

Image

001

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

d1

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

floyd & co

Marginals

Paper Producer

arthur young

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

10660

Box Contents

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