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" ... and expense, in judicial and other modes of procedure, for the sake of the profit, extractible out of the expense. In a Government which had for its end in view the greatest happiness of the greatest number, Alexander Wedderburn might have been Attorney... "
The Works of Jeremy Bentham, Now First Collected: Under the Superintendence ... - Page 151
by Jeremy Bentham - 1839
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An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, Volume 1

Jeremy Bentham - Crime - 1823 - 332 pages
...of procedure, for the sake of the profit, extractible out of the expense. In a Government which had for its end in view the greatest happiness of the greatest number, Alexander Wedderburn might have been Attorney General and then Chancellor : but he would not have been...
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A Fragment on Government; Or, a Comment on the Commentaries:: Being an ...

Jeremy Bentham - Law - 1823 - 216 pages
...a Government which CHAP. I. all-sufficient reason for every point of practice ^^V^ whatsoever. had for its end in view the greatest happiness of the greatest number, Alexander Wedderburn might have been Attorney General and then Chancellor ; but he would not bave been...
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An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, Volume 1

Jeremy Bentham - Crime - 1823 - 326 pages
...of procedure, for the sake of the profit, extractible out of the expense. In a Government which had for its end in view the greatest happiness of the greatest number, Alexander .Wedderburn might have been Attorney General and then Chancellor : but he would not have...
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Works of Jeremy Bentham, Volume 2, Part 1

Jeremy Bentham - 1839 - 316 pages
...not be nearly equivalent to the quantity of good, which its certain consequence, a real constitution, having for its end in view the greatest happiness of the greatest number, would produce. Among the laws by which the greatest happiness of the greatest number has been sacrificed...
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The Works of Jeremy Bentham, Volume 2

Jeremy Bentham - Constitutional law - 1843 - 618 pages
...increase of smuggling, would be the inj wry to themselves : the produce of the taxes is employed, tbe whole of it, in the service of all : no part of it...of aptitude with reference to any government that bas for its ultimate end in view the maximization of the happiness of those who share in it, and for...
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A Students' Manual of Ethical Philosophy: Adapted from the German of G. Von ...

Georg von Gizycki - Ethics - 1889 - 592 pages
...of procedure, for the sake of the profit extractible out of the expense. In a government which has for its end in view the greatest happiness of the greatest number, Alexander Wedderburn might have been attorney general and then chancellor ; but he would not have been...
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Students' Manual of Ethical Philosophy

Georg von Giźycki - Ethics - 1889 - 324 pages
...of procedure, for the sake of the profit extractible out of the expense. In a government which has for its end in view the greatest happiness of the greatest number, Alexander Wedderburn might have been attorney general and then chancellor ; but he would not have been...
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Sir Henry Maine: A Brief Memoir of His Life

Henry Sumner Maine, Sir Mountstuart Elphinstone Grant Duff - Great Britain - 1892 - 472 pages
...the all but complete suppression of fees and costs : ' An all-comprehensive code of substantive law, having for its end in view the greatest happiness of the greatest number, each part of it present to the minds of all persons on whom conformity to its enactments, its attainment...
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Lectures on the Relation Between Law & Public Opinion in England During the ...

Albert Venn Dicey - Great Britain - 1905 - 536 pages
...procedure " for the sake of the profit extractible out of the " expense. In a Government which had for its end " in view the greatest happiness of the greatest " number, Alexander Wedderburn might have been " Attorney-General and then Chancellor; but he would "not have...
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Lectures on the Relation Between Law & Public Opinion in England During the ...

Albert Venn Dicey - Great Britain - 1905 - 532 pages
...procedure " for the sake of the profit extractible out of the " expense. In a Government which had for its end " in view the greatest happiness of the greatest " number, Alexander Wedderburn might have been " Attorney-General and then Chancellor; but he would " not have...
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