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<note>Corpus delicti</note> | <note>Corpus delicti</note> | ||
while the old before they wanted them | <p><add>while</add> the old <add>before they wanted them</add> were serviceable, not to mention the inconvenience <lb/>of keeping <add>setting</add> so many other kinds of work at<lb/>a stand for the time that it would take to stock the country<lb/>with [a sufficient number of] the implements in question<lb/>were it to be done at once.<lb/></p><p>As between one country and another the want<lb/>of uniformity between weights and measures is not so<lb/>likely to be productive of mistakes. That the weights<lb/>and measures of another country are liable to be different <lb/>from those of his own is what a man <add>who has common circumspection</add> can<lb/>hardly avoid being aware of: especially if the languages <lb/>of the two countries be different. <add>are not the same.</add> Here the<lb/><del>only</del> <add><del>principal</del> most extensive head of</add> inconvenience <del>worth mentioning</del> seems to be the<lb/>trouble and <del>l</del> expence of time which it requires<lb/>to bring the weights and measures of the one<lb/>country into comparison with those of the other.<lb/>This inconvenience is far from being inconsiderable:<lb/>but it can scarcely be said to belong to the present<lb/> subject: unless it be by <del>the facility it gives to</del> <add>enabling</add> merchants<lb/>of all countries to practise a kind of extortion if such<lb/>it <del>can</del> <add>may</add> be called, upon cusomers and upon one another<lb/>in virtue of the mystery which this circumstance<lb/>more than <add>perhaps</add> any other contributes to spread<lb/>over evey thing that relates to commerce.<lb/></p>Another head of inconvenience which though not so extensive<lb/>is perhaps equally <add>of equal</add> important<add>ce</add> is that in which the science<lb/>of medicine is concerned. Wherever there happens to be any material<lb/>difference in respect of weights and measures especially in the minute<lb/>degrees the pharmacopoeia of one country if made use of in another, is in<lb/>danger of proving either un..uctive or dilesece. This circumstance <del>is</del> <add>proves</add> a considerable obstacle to the free communication of this most important branch of knowledge. And a similar inconvenience takes place in a greater or less degree in other arts, the success of which depends upon <del>the nice adjusgment of the quantities</del> nice proportions.<lb/> | ||
12
Indirect
Corpus delicti
while the old before they wanted them were serviceable, not to mention the inconvenience
of keeping setting so many other kinds of work at
a stand for the time that it would take to stock the country
with [a sufficient number of] the implements in question
were it to be done at once.
As between one country and another the want
of uniformity between weights and measures is not so
likely to be productive of mistakes. That the weights
and measures of another country are liable to be different
from those of his own is what a man who has common circumspection can
hardly avoid being aware of: especially if the languages
of the two countries be different. are not the same. Here the
only principal most extensive head of inconvenience worth mentioning seems to be the
trouble and l expence of time which it requires
to bring the weights and measures of the one
country into comparison with those of the other.
This inconvenience is far from being inconsiderable:
but it can scarcely be said to belong to the present
subject: unless it be by the facility it gives to enabling merchants
of all countries to practise a kind of extortion if such
it can may be called, upon cusomers and upon one another
in virtue of the mystery which this circumstance
more than perhaps any other contributes to spread
over evey thing that relates to commerce.
Another head of inconvenience which though not so extensive
is perhaps equally of equal importantce is that in which the science
of medicine is concerned. Wherever there happens to be any material
difference in respect of weights and measures especially in the minute
degrees the pharmacopoeia of one country if made use of in another, is in
danger of proving either un..uctive or dilesece. This circumstance is proves a considerable obstacle to the free communication of this most important branch of knowledge. And a similar inconvenience takes place in a greater or less degree in other arts, the success of which depends upon the nice adjusgment of the quantities nice proportions.
Identifier: | JB/087/156/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 87. |
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087 |
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156 |
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002 |
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text sheet |
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recto |
f11 / f12 / f13 / f14 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield motif]]] |
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27681 |
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