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all Laws are penal</p> | all Laws are penal</p> | ||
There is no Law but what <del>forbids <sic>somthing</sic> to be done or commands <sic>somthing</sic> <add>to</add></del> <add><del>directs</del> <sic>somthing</sic> to be done or not <del>done</del> <add>abstained from</add> commands somebody to do or to abstain from <sic>somthing</sic></add><lb/> | <p>There is no Law but what <del>forbids <sic>somthing</sic> to be done or commands <sic>somthing</sic> <add>to</add></del> <add><del>directs</del> <sic>somthing</sic> to be done or not <del>done</del> <add>abstained from</add> commands somebody to do or to abstain from <sic>somthing</sic></add><lb/> | ||
<del>be done</del> — now for <del>to</del> doing or abstaining from acting <add>doing</add> men must have motives & <gap/>;<lb/> | <del>be done</del> — now for <del>to</del> doing or abstaining from acting <add>doing</add> men must have motives & <gap/>;<lb/> | ||
those motives must be [certain <add>& uniform</add> in] <add>such as can be depended upon for</add> their operation upon the mind. But of <gap/><lb/> | those motives must be [certain <add>& uniform</add> in] <add>such as can be depended upon for</add> their operation upon the mind. But of <gap/><lb/> | ||
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more certain of receiving pain by such means as the Law can employ to give<lb/> | more certain of receiving pain by such means as the Law can employ to give<lb/> | ||
him pain, than he can of receiving pleasure by such means as it can<lb/> | him pain, than he can of receiving pleasure by such means as it can<lb/> | ||
to give him pleasure. | to give him pleasure. <note>Coercion therefore is in common speech understood to belong to the former class of Sanctions; <sic>tho'</sic> the mind is <add>strictly speaking</add> neither more nor less free in the one case than in the other.) The notion that this gives us of the <del>matter</del> <add>affair</add> is that, <del>the States</del> as matters stand at present with the nation there is not money enough to reward everybody: for but if there was a certain number of times the money in as that there is, then we might turn our Gibbets. It would then be a good <gap/> account current between the States</note> Besides this <del>every <gap/> <gap/> in</del> <add>pain can be created, and <sic>it's</sic> sources</add> are inexhaustible<lb/> | ||
<del>but</del> pleasure can be scarce ever be created <add>[by Laws]</add> but must <add>can <del>be</del></add> be transferred. + <note>+ A late writer, after rummaging Locke & Puffendorf without success, seems still <del><gap/></del> <add>hard</add> <del>at a loss</del> <add>set</add> to find the reason why the sanction of Laws must consist <del>in</del> <add>rather in penalties than</add> rewards, <del>perhaps</del> his [reason] is, "that obedience to the Law is a matter of duty, <hi rend='underline'>demandable</hi> from the subject and unnecessary to be purchased by the allurements of gifts and privileges." Principles of Pen. Law p. 289</note> by the Law, & <sic>it's</sic><lb/> | |||
Law may be divided <del>from</del> <add>There must therefore be a Sanction, & that Sanction <del>can</del> must be a Punishment.</add> its abject into Civil or Distributive <sic>Oeconomical</sic> | |||
or accumulative: and Political or instrumental: <add>preservative</add> and that again into <gap/><lb/> | |||
<del>and</del> external —</p> | |||
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DIVISION of LAW — Characteristic of Penal Law. 6
It has been all along supposed [and the thing is evident] that in strictness of speech
all Laws are penal
There is no Law but what forbids somthing to be done or commands somthing to directs somthing to be done or not done <add>abstained from commands somebody to do or to abstain from somthing</add>
be done — now for to doing or abstaining from acting doing men must have motives & ;
those motives must be [certain & uniform in] such as can be depended upon for their operation upon the mind. But of
there are but two kinds — punishments and rewards: and a man can always be
more certain of receiving pain by such means as the Law can employ to give
him pain, than he can of receiving pleasure by such means as it can
to give him pleasure. Coercion therefore is in common speech understood to belong to the former class of Sanctions; tho' the mind is strictly speaking neither more nor less free in the one case than in the other.) The notion that this gives us of the matter affair is that, the States as matters stand at present with the nation there is not money enough to reward everybody: for but if there was a certain number of times the money in as that there is, then we might turn our Gibbets. It would then be a good account current between the States Besides this every in pain can be created, and it's sources are inexhaustible
but pleasure can be scarce ever be created [by Laws] but must can be be transferred. + + A late writer, after rummaging Locke & Puffendorf without success, seems still hard at a loss set to find the reason why the sanction of Laws must consist in rather in penalties than rewards, perhaps his [reason] is, "that obedience to the Law is a matter of duty, demandable from the subject and unnecessary to be purchased by the allurements of gifts and privileges." Principles of Pen. Law p. 289 by the Law, & it's
Law may be divided from There must therefore be a Sanction, & that Sanction can must be a Punishment. its abject into Civil or Distributive Oeconomical
or accumulative: and Political or instrumental: preservative and that again into
and external —
Identifier: | JB/096/104/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 96. |
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096 |
legislation |
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104 |
introd. law civil & criminal sanction why penal rather than praemiary |
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002 |
division of law - characteristics of penal law |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
f6 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::[gr with crown] [britannia with shield motif]]] |
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31108 |
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