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" In all human affairs, every person directly interested, and not under positive tutelage, has an admitted claim to a voice, and when his exercise of it is not inconsistent with the safety of the whole, cannot justly be excluded from it. But (though every... "
The Encyclopaedia Britannica: Ref to Shu - Page 114
1911
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Considerations on Representative Government

John Stuart Mill - Philosophy - 1861 - 354 pages
...exercise of it is not inconsistent with the safety of the whole, cannot justly be excluded from it. But (though every one ought to have a voice) that every...an equal voice is a totally different proposition. When two persons who have a joint interest in any business, differ in opinion, does justice require...
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Considerations on Representative Government

John Stuart Mill - Philosophy - 1861 - 376 pages
...exercise of it is not inconsistent with the safety of the whole, cannot justly be excluded from it. But (though every one ought to have a voice) that every...an equal voice is a totally different proposition. When two persons who have a joint interest in any business, differ in opinion, does justice require...
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The American System of Government: Its Character and Workings, Its Defects ...

Ezra Champion Seaman - United States - 1870 - 334 pages
...of ike whole, cannot be justly excluded from it. But though every one ought to have a voice—that every one should have an equal voice, is a totally different proposition. . . . Entire exclusion from a voice in the common concern is one thing; the concession to others of...
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On Representative Government and Personal Representation: Based in Part Upon ...

Simon Sterne - Proportional representation - 1871 - 250 pages
...exercise of it is not inconsistent with the safety of the whole, cannot justly be secluded from it. But (though every one ought to have a voice) that every...an equal voice is a totally different proposition. When two persons having a joint interest in any business * Considerations on Representative Government,...
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The Modern Review: A Monthly Review and Miscellany, Volume 42

Ramananda Chatterjee - India - 1927 - 1144 pages
..."though ought to have a voice, have an equal voice have more numerically every one that every one should is a totally different proposition." The well-informed...test of value of opinion, Mill was careful to say that he did not mean property — though the principle was so important that he would not abolish such...
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Calendar, Part 3

University of Calcutta - 1907 - 446 pages
...arose as to the method .to be followed in making them ? MILL'S Representative Government. 1. ' But though every one ought to have a voice, — that every one should liiive an equal voice, is a totally different proposition.' What exceptions to the principle of 'one...
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The Encyclopaedia Britannica: Ref to Shu

Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1911 - 1086 pages
...shape," by which he explained that he did not mean " indirect taxes," a " mode of defraying a share oí the public expenses which is hardly felt." He advocated...voting, which should give him more votes than one. As to Ihc test of value of opinion, Mill was careful to say he did not mean property — though the principle...
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Political Equality: An Essay in Democratic Theory

Charles R. Beitz - Philosophy - 1989 - 288 pages
...argument from best results to popular government is not simultaneously an argument to political equality: "though every one ought to have a voice — that every...should have an equal voice is a totally different proposition."10 Mill argued that the interests of society will be advanced most effectively if the...
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Process Philosophy and Political Ideology: The Social and Political Thought ...

Randall C. Morris - Political Science - 1991 - 308 pages
...qualified being given more votes than the less qualified. "[T]hough every one ought to have a voice—that every one should have an equal voice is a totally different proposition.'-' 62 Hartshorne's protective argument for democracy is more akin to Mill's than to Bentham's. Hartshorne...
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Power: Critical Concepts, Volume 3

John Scott - Anmeldelser - 1994 - 484 pages
...admirer of Mill's like Professor Walker is surely aware, Mill did not advocate equal power: ". . . Though every one ought to have a voice — that every...an equal voice is a totally different proposition ... If, with equal virtue, one [person] is superior to the other in knowledge and intelligence —...
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