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| <p>The other is — "the rule which (says he) requires that <lb/>juries be unanimous in their verdicts.  . To expect (<gap/> <lb/>he) that <unclear>treated</unclear> men, taken by lot out of a promiscuous <lb/>multitude should agree <del>in their opinion</del> he should have <lb/>said should ever partly agree in their opinion upon points <lb/>confessedly dubious, and upon which oftentimes the wisest <lb/>judgments might be held in suspense; or to suppose that <lb/>any real unanimity, or change of opinion in the dissenting <lb/>jurist, could be procured by confusing them until <lb/>they all consented to the same verdict; bespeaks more of <lb/>the <gap/> of a barbarous age, than of the policy which <lb/>could dictate (say rather which ought to have directed) <lb/>such an institution as that of juries. <del>They</del> </p> | <p>The other is — "the rule which (says he) requires that <lb/>juries be unanimous in their verdicts.  . To expect (<gap/> <lb/>he) that <unclear>treated</unclear> men, taken by lot out of a promiscuous <lb/>multitude should agree <del>in their opinion</del> he should have <lb/>said should ever partly agree in their opinion upon points <lb/>confessedly dubious, and upon which oftentimes the wisest <lb/>judgments might be held in suspense; or to suppose that <lb/>any real unanimity, or change of opinion in the dissenting <lb/>jurist, could be procured by confusing them until <lb/>they all consented to the same verdict; bespeaks more of <lb/>the <gap/> of a barbarous age, than of the policy which <lb/>could dictate (say rather which ought to have directed) <lb/>such an institution as that of juries. <del>They</del> </p> | ||
| <p>Thus far the Reverent Doctor: <del>the</del> <add>a</add> <hi rend="underline">supposition</hi> To <lb/>suppose that any real unanimity or change of opinion <lb/>could be thus <unclear>preserved</unclear> — <del>a</del> viz. preserved by confining <lb/>men (until they all professed to consent <add>join in <add><sic>concurr</sic></add></add> into the same <lb/> opinion) by keeping men in a state of confinement <lb/>would indeed <del>be a</del> if really entertained, be a most <lb/>wild and extravagant <del>opinion</del>: <add>supposition</add> supposition not to<lb/> be <unclear>instated</unclear> but by that which affect that utter <lb/>peace, <gap/> peace or <gap/> are capable of being <lb/>promoted by <del>taking</del> picking out such questions <add><sic>topicks</sic></add> as <lb/><del>collect</del> the most vehement dissentions and controversies <lb/>have been observed and   | <p>Thus far the Reverent Doctor: <del>the</del> <add>a</add> <hi rend="underline">supposition</hi> To <lb/>suppose that any real unanimity or change of opinion <lb/>could be thus <unclear>preserved</unclear> — <del>a</del> viz. preserved by confining <lb/>men (until they all professed to consent <add>join in <add><sic>concurr</sic></add></add> into the same <lb/> opinion) by keeping men in a state of confinement <lb/>would indeed <del>be a</del> if really entertained, be a most <lb/>wild and extravagant <del>opinion</del>: <add>supposition</add> supposition not to<lb/> be <unclear>instated</unclear> but by that which affect that utter <lb/>peace, <gap/> peace or <gap/> are capable of being <lb/>promoted by <del>taking</del> picking out such questions <add><sic>topicks</sic></add> as <lb/><del>collect</del> the most vehement dissentions and controversies <lb/>have been observed and forcing men to declare <add>express</add> <del>by</del> in <lb/>imperishable characters their <gap/> in a long <lb/>string of opinions on these subjects on pain of forfeiting <lb/><del>their expectation of</del> all chance of the great object of their lives. </p> | ||
Feb 7 1809
The other is — "the rule which (says he) requires that 
juries be unanimous in their verdicts.  . To expect ( 
he) that treated men, taken by lot out of a promiscuous 
multitude should agree in their opinion he should have 
said should ever partly agree in their opinion upon points 
confessedly dubious, and upon which oftentimes the wisest 
judgments might be held in suspense; or to suppose that 
any real unanimity, or change of opinion in the dissenting 
jurist, could be procured by confusing them until 
they all consented to the same verdict; bespeaks more of 
the  of a barbarous age, than of the policy which 
could dictate (say rather which ought to have directed) 
such an institution as that of juries. They 
Thus far the Reverent Doctor: the a supposition To 
suppose that any real unanimity or change of opinion 
could be thus preserved — a viz. preserved by confining 
men (until they all professed to consent join in <add>concurr</add> into the same 
 opinion) by keeping men in a state of confinement 
would indeed be a if really entertained, be a most 
wild and extravagant opinion: supposition supposition not to
 be instated but by that which affect that utter 
peace,  peace or  are capable of being 
promoted by taking picking out such questions topicks as 
collect the most vehement dissentions and controversies 
have been observed and forcing men to declare express by in 
imperishable characters their  in a long 
string of opinions on these subjects on pain of forfeiting 
their expectation of all chance of the great object of their lives. 
| Identifier: | JB/035/298/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 35. | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1809-02-13 | |||
| 035 | constitutional code; evidence; procedure code | ||
| 298 | |||
| 001 | |||
| text sheet | 1 | ||
| recto | c7 / c2 | ||
| jeremy bentham | th 1806 | ||
| andre morellet | |||
| 1806 | |||
| 10891 | |||