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1819 Aug. 15 5 ult
o
Fallacies Ch | | Logical High fliers
5
1. Exposition
5 On the occasion of the creation, preservation and support given to this[?] this government, to these laws, to this Constitution, to these Institutions, certain forms have been observed. Fifth theme for your panegyric, Forms.
6 In and by the maintenance of these forms not to go further back in the series of laudable entities it cannot be denied but that a certain Order is observable: a certain Order has been maintained. For the same reason for which to the word /subject/ Institutions you prefixt the word /adjunct/ English, to the word Order prefix the adjunct social. Sixth theme for your panegyric Social Order.
On the occasions on which the sinecure offices of the Ecclesiastical class and the English Institutions and Forms, and Social Order by which they have been established have come in question, if the question has been put, for what purpose the expence of them has been incurred, and the contributions /payments/ by which the emolument of them are made up exacted, the answer has been - the service of religion. Seventh theme of your panegyric, Religion.
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Title: [1819 Aug. 15 4 ult Fallacies Ch |]Description: 1819 Aug. 15 4 ult Fallacies Ch | | Logical Highfliers 4 1. Exposition Suppose for example you have /to defend/ groundless or needless wars sinecure or useless or needless or overpaid offices, lay or ecclesiastical to defend, and this is among the fallacies you employ in the defence of these abuses. 1 In the first place, the course you take is suppose the director[?] and laudative. 1. The official cause or instrument by which the Offices have been instituted or that by which they have been kept on fort[?] and maintained is a measure of government. You accordingly pronounce a panegyric /an elogium/ on Government. 2 It will seldom happen but that these works of government called Laws have been employed to the same purpose. Here then is another theme or subject for your panegyric. 3 In the aggregate system of law in every /this as in every other/ country, there is one branch which has taken for its province the delineation of the powers possessed and exercised by the ruling few, and the description of the sorts of persons by whom these powers are possessed and exercised. This branch is termed the Constitutional branch: the fruit of it, the Constitution Third theme for you panegyric, the Constitution. 4 Among the objects in the creation or preservation of which the Government, the Laws, and the Constitution have been employed, are certain objects called Institutions. The institution of a sinecure office, a useless office, a useless office, the institution of the overpay of an overpaid office, is an Institution. Fourth theme or subject for panegyric, Institutions. [...?] for the purpose of calling in national prejudice to the assistance of this fallacy, add the adjunct English - say English Institutions.
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Title: [1819 Aug. 15 6 ult o Fallacies]Description: 1819 Aug. 15 6 ult o Fallacies Ch | | Logical High fliers 6 1. Exposition II. In the next and last place, the course you take is suppose the indirect or vituperative Of this course the description is extremely /altogether/ simple. The essence of it is consists in an apposite use of the word enemy. When by /As often as/ the adversary on objection is made to abuse in any of these /the above/ shapes, and for the removal of it parliamentary reform or any other measure is spoken of as necessary, you bring to view these several objects of popular respect, and thence of rhetorical panegyric, any or all of them, and inform him and other for his and their information, that he is respectively an enemy to them. Sir, You are an enemy to Government, Sir, you are an enemy to Law /to the Laws./ to the Constitution, to English Institutions to social order, to the Forms by which it is maintained: - and to crown all - (Sir (may infinite and everlasting torment light upon you, as it will /can not/ be sure to do!) you are an Enemy to Religion. To crown all in addition to the above mentioned articles /pieces. of information, or to save words in lieu of them - all or any of them - you may inform him that he s Jacobin. See Ch. 1 Fallacy 1. The Hob-goblin-crier's Fallacy.
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Title: [1819 Aug. 16 *14 Fallacies Ch |]Description: 1819 Aug. 16 *14 Fallacies Ch | | Logical *8 2 Exposure Order In this country, in which tyranny has not yet found it expedient to throw off all cloaks, a sort of delicacy in this particular is observed. On the Continent, for the justification of every thing that is done the word order in paris naturalibus /stark naked/, and without a eulogistic epithet has generally been regarded as sufficient: though in France to this subject the despot such has been his condescension has now and then prefixt the conciliatory adjunct bon - good order being the sort of order of which he would sometimes be pleased to profess the maintenance. But in England, on an occasion of this sort prefixt to the word order has been the word social: but more especially when the cloak employed has been of the vituperative cast. Thus when for the purpose of heaping odium on this or that man whose endeavour had been to promote reform or improvement the word order has in this way been employed as an instrument the word social ha been attached /prefixt/ to it. The phrase An enemy to order presents the idea rather of weakness of the understanding: The phrase an enemy to social order adds to that idea, that of the blackness of the heart. The [...?] of Forms
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