| Jeremy Bentham - 1839 - 314 pages
...with a view to increase of the means either of subsistence or enjoyment, without some special reason, the general rule is, that nothing ought to be done or attempted by government. The motto, or watchword of government, on these occasions, ought to be — Be quiet. For this quietism there are... | |
| Jeremy Bentham - Constitutional law - 1843 - 642 pages
...with a view to increase of the means either of subsistence or enjoyment, without some special reason, the general rule is, that nothing ought to be done or attempted by government. The motto, or watchword of government, on these occasions, ought to be — Be quiet. For this quietism there are... | |
| Charles Ryle Fay - Great Britain - 1920 - 344 pages
...with a view to increase of the means either of subsistence or enjoyment, without some special reason, the general rule is, that nothing ought to be done or attempted by government. The motto, or watchword of government, on these occasions, ought to be — Be quiet "2. The Non-Agenda are the main... | |
| John Maynard Keynes - Business & Economics - 1927 - 64 pages
...service of the Utilitarian philosophy. For example, in A Manual of Political Economy,2 he writes : "The general rule is that nothing ought to be done or attempted by government; the motto or watchword of government, on these occasions, ought to be — Be quiet. . . . The request which agriculture,... | |
| Individualist bookshop limited, London - Individualism - 1927 - 104 pages
...with a view to increase the means either of subsistence or enjoyment, without some special reason, the general rule is, that nothing ought to be done or attempted by government. The motto, or watchword of government on these occasions, ought to be — Be quiet ; . . . The request which agriculture,... | |
| David Wardle - History - 1976 - 212 pages
...accepted, indeed welcomed by contemporary writers. In his Manual of Political Economy Bentham wrote: The general rule is that nothing ought to be done or attempted by government. The motto, or watchword of government on these occasions ought to be - Be quiet,' It was statements such as these... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - Business & Economics - 1991 - 676 pages
...with a view to increase of the means either of subsistence or enjoyment, without some special reason, the general rule is, that nothing ought to be done or attempted by Government. The motto, or watchword of Government, on these occasions, ought to be — Be Quiet.18 This may sound like a sweeping... | |
| Bhikhu C. Parekh - Political Science - 1993 - 384 pages
...with a view to increase of the means either of sub-sistence or enjoyment, without some special reason, the general rule is, that nothing ought to be done or attempted by Government. The motto, or watchword of Government, on these occasions, ought to be—Be Quiet. 18 "encouragement" and not with... | |
| Bhikhu C. Parekh - 1993 - 616 pages
...with a view to increase of the means either of subsistence or enjoyment, without some special reason, the general rule is, that nothing ought to be done or attempted by the government. The motto, or watchword of government, on these occasions, ought to be— Be Quiet."... | |
| Alfred C. Stepan - Political Science - 2001 - 388 pages
...interference. Society was a homeostatic system with only minimal need for a state. Thus Jeremy Bentham argued, "The general rule is, that nothing ought to be done or attempted by government. The motto, or watchword of government, on these occasions, ought to be — Be quiet — With few exceptions, and... | |
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