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Judicial Estab. Judges Number
in question is : one part of the public guided
judging merely by from the shall approve think the
decision of the Judge is a right one merely because
it is his decision: and with respect to this tpart
he sense of security will remain inviolate. But
another part at the same time will be guided by
reasonform an opinion of their own and judge
from reason: and with respect to this part the
sense of security will suffer a wound more or
less keen sharp acute in proportion to the injustice
This ground of independence on public opinion
will itself is evident in proportion to
The strength of this ground of independence it
must increase it is evident in proportion to the
numbers. To the In Frome while there existed
the a Parliament of Paris there must always have
been great multitudes a large proportion of the people with whom
any decision whatever given by its so numerous
a body of Judges of high station as the Parliament
of Paris would have passed for goodmerely be-
-cause it way the decision of the Parliament of
Paris. In England a measure so palpably un-
-just+ as the decision against Mr Wilkes relarive
to the Middlesex Election passed with there were multitudes for just
Identifier: | JB/051/379/003"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 51. |
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6-8 |
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051 |
evidence; procedure code |
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379 |
judicial establishment judges number |
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003 |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f7* / f8* / f9 / f10 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::l munn [britannia with shield emblem]]] |
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benjamin constant |
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16544 |
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