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Ch. 2. Leading features
'.4.II. Population
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Chap 4.
Of Population
'.4. {II. Population} {4} /II/ Section 1 Sponte Acta with regard to Increase of
Population by Births everything may be left to the spontaneous action of
individuals+. {5} /1[?]/. {Non Agenda} {6. Non Agenda.}
Section 2 Agenda
with regard to increase of population next to nothing is required to be done by
Government; all that Government need do is to prevent decrease by deperition
{The support of Population may be aimed at in either of two ways - 1. preventing
decrease of deperition - 2. - causing encrease.}
{I. Prevention of Decrease. Agenda.}
1. To prevent deperition is to afford Security: security against the extremity
of all mischief, destruction of man's life. The only reason for action, on the
part of government, belongs in this case to another head. {Note See Ch.1.
Defence against external hostility, internal hostility, or calamity.}
Examples of Institutions for preventing deperition.
1. Hospitals for the use of the curable sick and hurt among the Poor.
2. Hospitals for the incurable sick and helpless.
3. Establishments for the occasional maintenance & employment of the
able-bodied among the poor: viz. of such by whom either the one or the other is
unobtainable from the ordinary sources. By their maintenance, population is
preserved: by their employment, wealth may be encreased or not;- crimes of
idleness are prevented.
4. Establishments for the preservation or mitigation of contagious diseases:
establishments, in former times for Inoculation; now for Vaccination. Much may
be done on the part of government, under this head as well as so many others, by
instruction: more or less requires to be done, in proportion as by the ignorance
of the people, operations of this class are excluded from the class of Sponte
Acta, and thence [laced among the Agenda.
Section 3
{Causation of Increase-} Non Agenda because Sponte acta
Institutions on the part of Government, having for their end in view the
causation of increase of population by Births may best be characterized by a
parallel example - Institutions - punishing men for not eating, or for eating
food not sufficiently nourishing:- Institutions paying all mankind for eating
with premiums for those who eat most and oftenest.
[Marginal rubric:] Continue the Section by adding transplanted matter p279 to
286.
+ Montesquieu XXIII.21.
Similar Items
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Title: [11 March 1804 Polit. Economy]Description: 11 March 1804 Polit. Economy Population 1 { II. Population IV Sponte acta - V Non Agenda. VI Agenda The support of population may be aimed at in either of two ways - 1. preventing decrease by deperition: causing encrease. I. Prevention of Decrease. 1 To prevent deperition is to afford Security: security against the extremity of all mischief, destruction of man's life. The only reason for action on the part of government belongs in this case to another head. See the Defence against external hostility internal hostility, or calamity. Examples of institutions for preventing deperition - 1. Hospitals for the use of the curable sick and hurt among the poor 2. Hospitals for the incurable sick and helpless. 3. Establishments for the occasional maintenance and employment of the able-bodied among the poor: viz: of such by whom either the one or the other is unobtainable from the ordinary sources. By their maintenance, population is preserved: by their employment, be wealth encreased or no, crimes of idleness are prevented. 4. Establishments for the prevention or mitigation of contagious diseases Establishments till now for inoculation, henceforward for vaccination. Much may be done on the part of government, under this head as well as so many others, by instruction. More or less requires to be done, in proportion as by the ignorance of the people, operations of this class are excluded from the class of Sponte Acta, and thence placed among the Agenda. II. Causation of Encrease. Institutions on the part of government, having for their end in view the causation of encrease of population by births, may best be characterized by a parallel example - Institutions punishing men for not eating, or for eating food not sufficiently nourishing: Institutions paying all mankind for eating, with premiums for those who eat most and oftenest. To this head may be referred penal laws punishing for what is commonly meant by infanticide for abortion, for irregularities of all sorts in the venereal appetite. The apprehension of a deficiency of population for want of the regular intercourse between the sexes in the way of marriage is altogether upon a par with an apprehension of the like result from a general disposition in mankind to starve themselves. Days in a year, 365: average power of and disposition to procreation, say equal to one act of sexual conjunction per diem the year round. Number of children capable of being produced between each pair by a single act of procreation in the first day of the 365, 1; No of do capable of being produced by an act of sexual conjunction for each day of the year, one and no more. On these assumptions, The disposition to sexual conjunction in the regular way is 365 times as great as it need be to the production of the maximum of effect in the way of population. Halve the ratio, or double it the conclusion will be the same. Before any the least decrease of population could have been produced by the uncontrouled indulgence of irregular appetites, the regular gratification of the regular appetite must have become unnatural to an extreme.}
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Title: [10 Mar 1804 Political Economy]Description: 10 Mar 1804 Political Economy + Note Note Ch 1 Method I Wealth II Non Agenda Note Among these several classes - Agenda, Sponte acta and Non Agenda - the distribution of the imaginable stock of institutions will differ in a very considerable degree according to the different circumstances of the several political communities. In regard to defalcations from general opulence for the security of subsistence, a sacrifice /an arrangement/ of that sort which in one country may be at once needful and practicable, may in another be either not needful, or what is more apt to be the case not practicable. The greater the degree of opulence, the greater the list of Sponte Acta - the less therefore that of Agenda. In Great Britain /England/ abundance of useful things are done by individuals, which in other countries are done either by government, or not at all. Docks, Harbours, Canals, Roads - Offices for Insurance {from} /Institutions for relief against/ misfortune - in a variety of shapes, and a variety of causes: Bodily affliction, death of friends, Fire - hostile capture criminal depredation. In Russia, under Peter the great, the list of Sponte Acta being a blank, that of Agenda was proportionally abundant.
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Title: [nd [wm 1800] Ch. 2. Leading Features]Description: nd [wm 1800] Ch. 2. Leading Features. '.2. Wealth. 2. Agenda 4 2 4 41 individuals, spontaneously associated for the purpose, to give a more effectual combination to their exertions, in the pursuit of a common end. 4. {Whatever} /Wherever/ Non Agenda have been acta, the doing away of these male acta may form so many additions to the catalogue of Agenda. To this head belong those operations which consist in the removal of Sponte acta.(b) Note (b) Examples. 1. Facilitating the conversion of intercommunity of occupation of land into separate ownership. 2. Abolition or modification of those laws by which land is vested inalienably in a line of natural successors, how much soever, by impoverishment, disabled from causing increase, or even presenting decrease, in the value of its produce. 3. Abolition or modification of laws, which give the like perpetuity, to obligations attached to property in land, in the case where those obligations are attended with greater burthen, (viz. in the way of obstruction of increase) to the party on whom they are imposed, than profit to the party in whose favour they were imposed. Such is the case with many of the obligations termed (with reference to the party favoured by them) feudal rights. 4. Gradual abolition and intermediate modification of those personal obligations which come under the head of Slavery.
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