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1819 Dec.17
Note (a) ?
II Nature of the case
§.10 X Sponge no proof
Reasons against
Radicalism not dangerous
Sponge
or 1
Reasons against a Sponge.
1. Advantage none, Yes
if creditors were all foreigners
pecuniary advantage a
motive: countermotive none,
but the consequences of
the dishonestly Left to
Money lost to creditors
since no do gained
by debtors. But money
the suffering
by loss greater than
enjoyment by gain
Else no case for
preventing theft &c
1. Reasons against a National Sponge compleat
into insolvency in the part of government.
1. Upon the face of it it presents not any national advantage
in any shape, yes:if If the creditors were all all of them, a
any very largethe greater proportion of these foreigners: for here would be pecuniary
advantage for for a motive: for a countermotive
none but he dishonesty, and the attendant natural consequences of it.
Setting freighters out of the question, on setting many against money, all that more in the
character of debts, would gain men in the character of
creditors would lose. Considering Taking into the account the whole of the community
together, here then in many there would be no gain.
But money is of no value, otherwise thence but as a means of happiness
paidHow as happiness there would be great less. For quantity
and quality being equal, and all other circumstances the
sp suffering from less is always greater than enjoyment
from gain: otherwise there would be no preponderant
evil produced by theftdepredation in any shape nor reasonable cause for
presenting it.
2
2 Earliest sufferers those
to whom the sponge
has been seen to be most
desirable. Particularly
manufacturers of goods
for operatedcustomers
Those whom all is
in the funds would
come to any
thing. The more
that in the fund.
the more compleatly
they would be disabled
from purchasing any
they buy said necessaries
2. The class Among those the proper who would suffer soonest
and most, would be all those by whom a change of this sortpreserve of that class of person by whom
in instances and be it what a change of the
sort has been considered a spoken of as desirable. Among
these, in an indefinitely large proportion perhaps
the greatest, are those by whom labour such goods are
manufactured b as have for their consumersconsumers and
purchasers in the possessors persons whom property is in this shape of ample fortunes existing in all
From this defalcation, though all labourers would suffer laboriousproportion for what does be for in inconsiderable part less to
productions are those which can be spread: Among the production course becoming of the measure in question the expend
in be for an
of husbandry where are those which consistently with life can notof the furnished to the manufacture
be spared. been necessary consequence. Those who
who all would no longer be all to purchase anything those who
who in all shapes
retained property no
more than sufficient
to purchase
would by their loss
in this shape be disabled
for customers to be
purchasers of those
Identifier: | JB/137/138/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 137. |
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1819-12-17 |
or 1, 2 |
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137 |
radicalism not dangerous |
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138 |
radicalism not dangerous |
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001 |
spunge |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
c4 / d6 / e1 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::[prince of wales feathers] i&m 1818]] |
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arthur wellesley, duke of wellington |
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1818 |
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46855 |
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