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1<lb/><head>Compensation Axioms</head><lb/><lb/><hi rend='underline'>1. A burthen lies the lighter, the more it is divided.</hi><lb/>2. <hi rend='underline'>A <add>An unexpected</add> loss to any amount produces more pain,</hi><lb/><hi rend='underline'>than <add>an unexpected</add> gain to the same amount does pleasure.</hi><lb/>3. A burthen to a given amount is to be presumed<lb/>to lie equally heavy on two persons, where no diff-<lb/>erence in their circumstances <add>can be <del>is</del> taken into the account.</add> can be assigned.<lb/>4. <add>The circumstances that make a loss heavier [or a gain] more delightful to a person are 1<hi rend='superscript'>st</hi></add> <del>The circumstances which</del> Constitutional seni-<lb/>-bility, present demand and intensity of expecta-<lb/>-tion, and the ratio of the gain or loss to the re-<lb/>-sidue of <del>t</del> a man's fortune.<lb/>5. If the three other circumstances were <add>be</add> laid out of<lb/>the case, the <del>real surplus of</del> <add>most pleasure will</add> <del>would</del> be produced<lb/>upon the whole by <add>adjudging</add> <del><gap/></del> the thing in dispute to<lb/><note>as between the parties<lb/>themselves</note><lb/>that one of the parties whose expectations is most<lb/>intense.<lb/>6. Taking the <del><gap/></del> <add>whole</add> community into consideration, the<lb/>most pleasure will be produced in the community<lb/>by adjudging the thing in dispute to that one<lb/>of the two parties whose expectation appears<lb/>to the community to be most intense.<lb/>7. Now to the community that one of the parties<lb/><del><gap/></del> is he whose expectation will appear to be<lb/>most intense, of whom it appears most probable<lb/>that he is <add>in</add> <del>those circumstances</del> <add>that situation which</add> is acknowledges<lb/>to give title to the party who is in it in this<lb/>case in question.<lb/>8. Now this situation is always determin<del>able</del>ed<lb/>by the <add>simple</add> matter of fact which is in <gap/> nature<lb/>of it notorious and susceptible of proof: <del>as</del> for<lb/>instance <add>that</add> the claimant is the eldest son of such an<lb/>one who is dead: or that the defendant made him such a
1<lb/><head>Compensation Axioms</head><lb/><lb/><hi rend='underline'>1. A burthen lies the lighter, the more it is divided.</hi><lb/>2. <hi rend='underline'>A <add>An unexpected</add> loss to any amount produces more pain,</hi><lb/><hi rend='underline'>than <add>an unexpected</add> gain to the same amount does pleasure.</hi><lb/>3. A burthen to a given amount is to be presumed<lb/>to lie equally heavy on two persons, where no diff-<lb/>-erence in their circumstances <add>can be <del>is</del> taken into the account.</add> can be assigned.<lb/>4. <add>The circumstances that make a loss heavier [or a gain] more delightful to a person are 1<hi rend='superscript'>st</hi></add> <del>The circumstances which</del> Constitutional seni-<lb/>-bility, present demand and intensity of expecta-<lb/>-tion, and the ratio of the gain or loss to the re-<lb/>-sidue of <del>t</del> a man's fortune.<lb/>5. If the three other circumstances were <add>be</add> laid out of<lb/>the case, the <del>real surplus of</del> <add>most pleasure will</add> <del>would</del> be produced<lb/>upon the whole by <add>adjudging</add> <del><gap/></del> the thing in dispute to<lb/><note>as between the parties<lb/>themselves</note><lb/>that one of the parties whose expectations is most<lb/>intense.<lb/>6. Taking the <del><gap/></del> <add>whole</add> community into consideration, the<lb/>most pleasure will be produced in the community<lb/>by adjudging the thing in dispute to that one<lb/>of the two parties whose expectation appears<lb/>to the community to be most intense.<lb/>7. Now to the community that one of the parties<lb/><del><gap/></del> is he whose expectation will appear to be<lb/>most intense, of whom it appears most probable<lb/>that he is <add>in</add> <del>those circumstances</del> <add>that situation which</add> is acknowledges<lb/>to give title to the party who is in it in this<lb/>case in question.<lb/>8. Now this situation is always determin<del>able</del>ed<lb/>by the <add>simple</add> matter of fact which is in <gap/> nature<lb/>of it notorious and susceptible of proof: <del>as</del> for<lb/>instance <add>that</add> the claimant is the eldest son of such an<lb/>one who is dead: or that the defendant made him such a





Revision as of 16:31, 3 October 2012

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1
Compensation Axioms

1. A burthen lies the lighter, the more it is divided.
2. A An unexpected loss to any amount produces more pain,
than an unexpected gain to the same amount does pleasure.
3. A burthen to a given amount is to be presumed
to lie equally heavy on two persons, where no diff-
-erence in their circumstances can be is taken into the account. can be assigned.
4. The circumstances that make a loss heavier [or a gain] more delightful to a person are 1st The circumstances which Constitutional seni-
-bility, present demand and intensity of expecta-
-tion, and the ratio of the gain or loss to the re-
-sidue of t a man's fortune.
5. If the three other circumstances were be laid out of
the case, the real surplus of most pleasure will would be produced
upon the whole by adjudging the thing in dispute to
as between the parties
themselves

that one of the parties whose expectations is most
intense.
6. Taking the whole community into consideration, the
most pleasure will be produced in the community
by adjudging the thing in dispute to that one
of the two parties whose expectation appears
to the community to be most intense.
7. Now to the community that one of the parties
is he whose expectation will appear to be
most intense, of whom it appears most probable
that he is in those circumstances that situation which is acknowledges
to give title to the party who is in it in this
case in question.
8. Now this situation is always determinableed
by the simple matter of fact which is in nature
of it notorious and susceptible of proof: as for
instance that the claimant is the eldest son of such an
one who is dead: or that the defendant made him such a




Identifier: | JB/100/099/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 100.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

100

Main Headings

punishment

Folio number

099

Info in main headings field

compensation axioms

Image

001

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f1 / e2 / f3 / f4

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::l v g propatria [britannia motif]]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

caroline vernon

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

32115

Box Contents

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