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2 Sept 1811
Jug. Util
B.II.
Ch. 6 7 8 Mischief. 5. Antipathy for pleasure
§.1. Generalia
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Ch. 6 8. Mischief 5. Producing antipathy towards others, for in the /partaking/ score of innoxuous pleasure act renamed antipathy from asceticism.
In the present life the happiness and unhappiness /felicity and infelicity/ of human beings depends in a large proportion on their /the [...?]/ affections and disposition and conduct /as towards /relation to/ one another/ (of such portion of the entire species as come within the sphere of one anothers influence, on the external /exterior/ conduct, and hence in the inward affection in which that conduct has its use: in good offices /or/ and ill offices, and thence in good will and ill will.
To promote in the breast of each man good will to all men is among the objects professed to be aimed at by them or some of them in whose discourses the Christian religion took its rise. But if such were the end aimed at, far from being conducive to that end have been some of the doctrines /affections/ that were soon embraced by and still continue to be prevalent among their followers.
Exactly opposite to the affection /termed/ of good will is the affection /termed/ of ill-will or antipathy. With the exception therefore of the case in which ill-will /or rather ill-office/ towards one person or persons is necessary to the preservation of another, whatsoever opinion tends to exist and produce antipathy, tends in the same proportion to produce mischief in that shape.
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Mischief.5. Producing antipathy from asceticism. Felicity or infelicity depends greatly on good and ill offices, thence on good and ill will.
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To promote good will is among the professions of the author of Christianity: to promote ill will is the tendency of many of their doctrines. Promotion of ill will is every thing that tends to excite antipathy.
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Title: [10 Sept 1811 Jug Util 8]Description: 10 Sept 1811 Jug Util 8 B.II. Under Revelation Ch. 8 Vitiating Conceptions II. Exaggeration Jesus's precepts. (7) Consider in another point of view this same precept we shall find it at any rate much less dangerous, much more purely if not extremely useful, in the character of a rule of prudence: and if benevolence be a virtue, /neither is/ prudence excluded from the catalogue of the virtues. But it is not in any such characters (that it is there presented) that it is even spoken of as presented by Jesus. In your dealings with another man, think how you yourself would on the occasion in question like to be dealt with, whether in your own place /situation/ or in his in so far as by a stretch of the imagination it may be in your power to put /place/ yourself in his. This only, though not without the requisite allowance for differences of feeling as resulting from differences in situation, will serve you /help/ /be of assistance in you/ in /determining/ your endeavours to determine whether and in what degree the mode of conduct which in the first impulse it occurs to you to observe towards him the effect would be likely to produce on his part uneasiness or satisfaction and thence as towards yourself goodwill or displeasure. 18. Rule of prudence an undangerous and more extensively useful character in which unlimited rule of benevolence might be, but is not, applied. Prudence a virtue as well as benevolence. On such occasions to avoid ill will and ill offices and imitate good will and good offices think what in the event of your doing or not doing what you propose would in his situation be your own feelings. 19. So far as due allowance is made for difference of feeling probably produced by difference of situation, this not merely the best but the only recourse for forming a right judgment on the question whether of the /act/ proposed the result will be in his part uneasiness or satisfaction, and as towards yourself good will and eventual good offices or ill will and correspondent offices.
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