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[034-168v]
1821. June 8.
Codification Offer.
'.5. Draughtsman single
I. Separate [...?]
it has, among its objects the promotion of some particular interest - and this, at the
expence, and by the sacrifice of, the greatest happiness of the greatest number - on
this supposition, the more consummate the aptitude of the workmen in respect of
intellectual power and active talent in relation to that end, the more extensive will be
that sacrifice. Not but that a case is conceivable enough in
which by the deficiency in intellectual aptitude and active talent more might be
produced than by them most perfect degree of inaptitude in a moral point of view coupled
with the most perfect degree of aptitude in those two other points of view. But the
subjects of consideration here are not such cases as are conceivable but such as are
more or less probable.
Now, as to the varieties which, in respect of the number of
the relative situations of the workmen thus employed, and the number of them in such
their respective situations the nature of the case admitts of: the influence exercised
by both these circumstances on the aptitude of the work will presently become
observable.
By the supposition, the draught in question is a discourse, which, when revised and
compleated, will be the expression given tot he will of the possessor or possessors of
the supreme power in the state, wherever they may be. By the supposition they are
therefore respectively the ultimate ordainer or ordainers of the work.
The hands in which this same superior power is lodged may be those of a single person,
or those of more divers persons: the work may have had either one ultimate ordainer and
no more, or divers ultimate ordainers.
In either case, the draught may have had for its composer or composers, those same
ultimate ordainer or ordainers, or some other person or persons, the nature of whose
respective situations with reference to those same ultimate ordainers would thereby be
subordinate.
These distinctions noted, the general case will be found resolvable into seven
particular ones.
1. Case 1. Ultimate ordainer, a single person: namely, the Monarch: Draughtsman, that same person. Subordinate, none.
2. Case 2. Ultimate ordainer a single person, the Monarch, as before: Subordinate
Draughtsman, a single individual.
3. Case 3. Ultimate ordainer, a single person - the Monarch - as before: Subordinate
Draughtsmen, divers: In English practice, A Board, or a Commission, is the aggregate denomination by which a set of
functionaries, thus appointed, are, in this case, commonly designated.
4. Case 4. Ultimate ordainers, divers: composing thereby a body of men and that, a
comparatively large one. Draughtsmen those same persons acting, all of them without
exception, in the composition of the draught.
5.
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