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[clx. 254]
1822 July 9
Constitut Code Rationale
Securities
Factitious honor
?. Expository matter
2. It operates as a sort of certificate - as an article of documentary evidence: as a certificate of merit /good desert/, whatsoever may be the idea in the community in question associated with the word merit: as a certificate declaring on the part of the person by whom the title is conferred an opinion that the person on whom it is conferred by him is a possessor /in possession of/ that same article called merit.
Of such certificate the effect is to cause respect in degree and quantity more or less considerable to be entertained by the members of the community in question to be entertained /manifested/ towards and in relation to him: respect, or at any rate the outward signs and tokens of that inward sentiment. This effect it produces, by ascribing dignity to him: dignity or worthiness: by causing it to be believed that in the opinion of him by whom the honor is conferred he on whom it is conferred is worthy of receiving at the hands of the members of the community in general those same outward tokens
It gives intimation that in the opinion of that same functionary, the person towards whom /in whose favor/ it is his desire that these same tokens of respect should be manifested and paid - manifested as it were in payment, has been and is deserving of such respect. To deserve any thing good any instrument of felicity is to have a claim to it in the character of a reward on the score of service - on the score of service in some shape or other rendered by the individual in question to some other individual or individuals: of which service if it be real must have been /an effect must have been/ the contributing in fact or in probability to cause him to experience pleasure in some shape in which he would not have experienced otherwise or to be exempt from experiencing pain which he would have experienced otherwise
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Title: [[clx. 255] 1822 July 9 Constitut]Description: [clx. 255] 1822 July 9 Constitut. Code Rationale Securities Factitious honor ?. Expository matter ? Proof of merit fallacious To /With/ the word merit if any clear idea is attached to it is attached /stands associated/ the idea of service: for by him to whom merit is ascribed, suppose no service rendered or endeavoured to be rendered to any body, the idea of merit evaporates and leaves the word in a state of non-significance. /Moreover/ If then in virtue of /according to the intimation given by/ the dignity conferred on /ascribed to/ him and the claim /alledged title/ to respect given to him, he has rendered service to any body it must have been service of the meritorious kind: service by the rendering of which the existence of merit has been displayed This /Moreover this/ service must have had something extraordinary in it - in its nature: something whereby it stands distinguished from ordinary service from service in those shapes in which it is customarily rendered by every body to every body by every dealer for example to his customer by every customer to his dealer - by every seller to his purchaser, by every purchaser to his seller. As in the case of service so in the case of respect the value /worth/ of it if it has any must consist either of a certainty (as in case of a past event /where the event is past/) or of a probability of pleasure in some shape or other experienced or pain in some shape or other escaped from /averted/ and not experienced. Laying all together - the intimation given /conveyed/ by the /an/ act by which a title of honor is conferred is - that the individual on whom it is conferred has in some determinate shape or other rendered to some individual or individuals or to the whole community together, service of a meritorious and in some way or other [...?] of an extraordinary cast /kind/, and has thereby shewn /proved/ himself to be possessed of dignity - i.e. by such service to have given himself a title to receive at the hands members of the community in question at large in general, tokens of respect, of the existence of the sentiment of respect in relation to him in their minds in relation to him, as if in payment or part payment of such service.
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Title: [[clx. 278] 1822 July 12 Constitut]Description: [clx. 278] 1822 July 12 Constitut Code Rationale 6 Factitious honor excluded 4. Evils produced 7. Evil 7: evil by sanction given to imposture. The character in which this token operates is that of a certificate of merit on the part of the wearer: of useful and meritorious service rendered by him in some shape or other to the community at large: and combined with this certificate is a draught drawn upon the members of the community in their character of members of the Public Opinion Tribunal for value received: a draught payable in tokens of respect, value received in the shape of meritorious service The functionaries by whom this counterfeit /deceptious/ instrument is uttered are by the practice of uttering it and the habit of seeing it accepted, encouraged to act in the character of impostors. It operates in this way on their moral faculties as an instrument of demoralization 8 Evil 8: evil by propagation of delusion. This evil is the counterpart of the last preceding one. In so far as the imposture /fraud/ passes upon them undiluted - in so far as they /men/ are imposed upon by it, and bestow respect where respect is undue and the payment of it mischievous - mischievous to themselves[?] mischievous, as hath been seen to every body it operates upon their intellectual faculties: it operates as an instrument of intellectual depravation.
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Title: [[xxxviii. 69] 1822 July 10.]Description: [xxxviii. 69] 1822 July 10. Constitut Code Rationale Factitious honor ?.1. Expository matter ??.1. Nature and modifications. 8 or 1. Characters in which a title of honor operates. 1. Order for respect: as such is a title to respect: i.e. to the external tokens of it: order for money is on one individual: for respect, on all. 9. or 2. Exercise of dominion on the many - in almost all. Instrument of dominion not coercion, not intimidation, but delusion. Evil thence not so great: yet still too great. 10. or 3. 2. Certificate of good desert, alias merit: import indeterminate; this the course of choice: Fact attested existence of this quality in the subject. 11. or 4. Effect produced, causing to be ascribed to him dignity: i.e. worthiness: viz. of receiving respect or tokens of it: means employed, opinion expressed by the conferring functionary that this benefit has been deserved by him - on whom conferred: deserved i.e. by service rendered by him: quere to whom? Of service, if real, the result must be pleasure or exemption from pain, actual or probable. 12. or 5. So, merited. Take away service, thence pleasure and pain, merit evaporates. 13. or 6. To be meritorious, such service must have had in it something extraordinary. Of services the most useful are such as have no merit. Thus self-feeding, and sale and purchase of food. 14. or 7. Respect - its value, if any, must consist in a certainty or probability of benefits in a more determinate shape.
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