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1819 Nov. 30
Radicalism not
II Experience
7 II Ireland
<p.16 or 8
Cause of such insincerity,
influence of
party, i.e. good in
<add>addition to personal interest to good
opinion good will
good office of men
united with a man
by a common interest
and in whose society he
lives
Not the opinion of
the public at large
guided by the do interest
or supposed interest.
of the public
Whigs in would our little script to deny this of
the existence of tranquillity be in Ireland. So as to
precedently in his Cloath is obtained: in good double rides, in carriages
advised, in mankind.
How are we to account for this? From the influence of party,
from their influence form which misrepresentation on any subject
may on any occasion may at all times be accounted for
On matters of government the only spring of action
which he may in addition to over and above personal interest, appears to
exercise any considerable influence on man's conduct is
what is called public opinion [the law of public opinion
more precisely the popular or moral sanction: for unless
it is so far as it applied to will it as it terminates in
will operating on will opinion — their opinion opinion
of one man concerning another is not capable of producing
any effect]
But that opinion — what is it? It is the opinion
if entertained the circle in which a man moves, the opinion
of those, and those alone on whom any those opinions
or rather on whose good will, and thence on their good
offices, he depends regards himself as more or less dependant
for every thing that on which he sets a value: and in but more particularly
those with whom he is in the habit, or entertains
the desire of associating with, and on whose countenance
towards him hischarity comforts and enjoyments day by
day depend.
17 or 9<lb/. What a man finds
party inducement be either
support it even so
absurd or false, if
it favours the interest
and affections of the
party, no danger runs
he of lessening himself
in their favour.
In the case of a party man these men are the men
of his own party.
Now then, that which on any occasion a man finds
an adequate inducement for giving utterance to, suppose it
to be in any degree absurd, or even flagrantly false; what
If it the interest and affections of the party to give
and currency to it, and this is known to him by experience or observation what need he care? His object is
to persevere, and, as far as may be what he place in their affections. it may happen to him to have
Be it ever so flagrantly absurd, be it ever so
false, if what he has too to say will but be favourable to their
object, neither its absurdity nor the falsehood will afford him any
inducement to support it.
Identifier: | JB/137/399/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 137. |
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1819-11-30 |
16 or 8 - 17 or 9 |
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137 |
radicalism not dangerous |
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399 |
radicalism not |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
e7 |
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jeremy bentham; john flowerdew colls |
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47116 |
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