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<p>The <add><del>That</del></add> want of <del>sufficient</del> <add>the</add> regard due to <del>exis</del> the<lb/> existing interests of individuals is one of the most<lb/> powerful causes as well as in many instances <lb/>the <add>perfectly</add> sufficient warrant of the opposition made to <lb/>plans of <hi rend='underline'><del>reformation</del></hi>: <add>of reform<add><del>political <hi rend='underline'>reforms</hi></del></add></add> and so serious is the objection, <lb/>so considerable the sum of evil which this causes <lb/>to be set against the sum of good expected <add>derivable</add> from<lb/> <del>the measure</del>, <add>such measures</add> as in many instances to have no <sic>ballance</sic> <lb/>in point of utility in favour of <del>it</del>. <add>them</add> </p> | <p>The <add><del>That</del></add> want of <del>sufficient</del> <add>the</add> regard due to <del>exis</del> the<lb/> existing interests of individuals is one of the most<lb/> powerful causes as well as in many instances <lb/>the <add>perfectly</add> sufficient warrant of the opposition made to <lb/>plans of <hi rend='underline'><del>reformation</del></hi>: <add>of reform<add><del>political <hi rend='underline'>reforms</hi></del></add></add> and so serious is the objection, <lb/>so considerable the sum of evil which this causes <lb/>to be set against the sum of good expected <add>derivable</add> from<lb/> <del>the measure</del>, <add>such measures</add> as in many instances to have no <sic>ballance</sic> <lb/>in point of utility in favour of <del>it</del>. <add>them</add> </p> | ||
<head>Note. ?</head> | |||
<p>The opposition <del>made</del> to which reforms are exposed has<lb/> its root in 1. Particular interests. 2. General prejudices. <lb/>The prejudices <del>are</del> have probably been set on foot, are certainly <add>always</add> <lb/>inflamed and propagated by the interests. Had it been <lb/>usual to take sufficient care of the interests, the prejudices <lb/>would hardly have got to such a head. </p> | |||
1
Civil B.1
The That want of sufficient the regard due to exis the
existing interests of individuals is one of the most
powerful causes as well as in many instances
the perfectly sufficient warrant of the opposition made to
plans of reformation: of reform<add>political reforms</add> and so serious is the objection,
so considerable the sum of evil which this causes
to be set against the sum of good expected derivable from
the measure, such measures as in many instances to have no ballance
in point of utility in favour of it. them
Note. ?
The opposition made to which reforms are exposed has
its root in 1. Particular interests. 2. General prejudices.
The prejudices are have probably been set on foot, are certainly always
inflamed and propagated by the interests. Had it been
usual to take sufficient care of the interests, the prejudices
would hardly have got to such a head.
Identifier: | JB/100/177/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 100. |
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jeremy bentham |
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