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1828 Nov 28
Law in Blackstone explained
7
92 3 continued
Astrea. in This aggregate cannot in any part
of it find to be a means to an end: For if the To the
truth of the proposition, you can not any one of you my
disciples, fail to be . For by which of you all was a
command ever given, that so ever the object had
not some end in view.
Tell us then Felicia what ought to the end in view of
law: meaning the all-comprehensive end of the whole aggregate
so called and of each part of it.
Felicia. Madam I obey: and my answer is<lb/.<del. Law as it ought to be has for its end the greatest
happiness of the greatest number: that is to say of the<lb?>number of the comments in question whatsoever it be: speaking
in the character of an Englishman I the community
of Englishmen: as to y character of a subject of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, of the community
composed of Britain and Irishmen: as a Member of the community
of mankind, the greatest happiness of the greatest number
is : as a member of the community composed of several
beings of all classes, the greatest happiness of the greatest number
of such beings.
Astrea. Said the most part of England being
England when being the country for the instruction of which this
University in which we are sitting has been founded to this our consideration shall we shall
for the present on the present be confined: except in so far as in
considering what belongs to England occasion should if necessary
Arise for when consideration of what belongs to her distant
dependencies and to foreign nations.
Further on, my daughter, a Law being a command I have need to explain to
<you what it is that constitutes one law: neither no less than
one law.
Identifier: | JB/031/214/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 31. |
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1828-11-18 |
3 continued |
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031 |
civil code |
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214 |
law and blackstone explained |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
d7 / e2 |
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jeremy bentham |
b&m 1828 |
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arthur moore; richard doane |
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1828 |
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9900 |
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