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| | [No title] (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06) |
 | | In vain would an Alexander bespeak a peculiar road for royal vanity, or a Ptolemy, a smoother one, for royal indolence. |
 | | The principle of utility was an appellative, at that time employed by me, as it had been by others, to designate that which, in a more perspicuous and instructive manner, may, as above, be designated by the name of the greatest happiness principle. |
 | | Dangerous it therefore really was, to the interest -- the sinister interest -- of all those functionaries, himself included, whose interest it was, to maximize delay, vexation, and expense, in judicial and other modes of procedure, for the sake of the profit, extractible out of the expense. |
| www.constitution.org /jb/pml.txt (16749 words) |
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