--%>

Eccentricities of Jeremy Bentham

The eccentricities of Jeremy Bentham (from 1748 to 1832) did not comprise: (i) allowing a pet pig to freely roam his mansion. (ii) petitioning the London Council for permission to replace shrubbery beside his driveway along with mummified human cadavers. (iii) leaving his estate to the University of London when his embalmed body would onto the Board of Trustees, everlastingly. (iv) being murdered through an insane servant while he was 84 years old.

Please choose the right answer from above...I want your suggestion for the same.

   Related Questions in Public Economics

  • Q : Explain about the Opportunity Cost in

    Opportunity cost is explained as the value of the: (w) best alternative specified for the decision made. (x) sum of all alternative choices while a decision is made. (y) monetary cost of making a decision. (z) cost incurred while one ignores alternati

  • Q : Explain economics as the study of

    Economics is generally explained as the study of how societies and individuals: (1) make options about work and the division of labor, (2) try to maximize their financial wealth and incomes, (3) answer the fundamental economic questions of "Why, Where, and When", (4)

  • Q : Incentives to create and to use goods

    Please help me to solve the problem of prices which is given below: Information regarding incentives to create and to use goods efficiently is imbedded most directly within: (i) Relative prices. (ii) Normative econ

  • Q : Illustration of Self Interest Elmer

    Elmer leaves his old mule Betsy and buys a new tractor to plow his fields. It is assumed to be consistent along with Elmer's perception of his best interest since: (w) tractors can plow more than a mule. (x) Elmer is assumed to be a rational farmer. (

  • Q : Price elasticity of demanded in

    The price elasticity of demand is the relative proportional change within the: (1) quantity of a good demanded yielded by a given absolute price change. (2) price generated through a specified change in quantity demanded. (3) quantity of a good demand

  • Q : FUNDAMENTAL economic problems of

    Society's FUNDAMENTAL economic problems do NOT comprise deciding: (w) what goods to produce. (x) how to produce the goods selected. (y) what occupation each person must pursue. (z) who must find to use the goods produced.

    Q : Moral dimensions of social decisions in

    Positive economics is LEAST related with the: (w) allocation of economic resources. (x) conflict of obtainable resources and societal needs. (y) mechanisms by that resources are used to satisfy societal requirements. (z) moral dimensions of social dec

  • Q : Usefulness of Positive Economics Please

    Please help me to solve the problem that is given below: Positive economics is MOST helpful within finding if: (i) Particular economic goals are good or not. (ii) A set of national goals is desirable. (iii) Specific economic t

  • Q : Labor resources of society Hello guys I

    Hello guys I need your advice. Please suggest some views for following economics problems that what are labor resources of society: (i) Identical along with its population, (ii) The mental and physical talents people make obtainable f

  • Q : Majority worse off and minority better

    When an economic change makes a huge majority of the population worse off and a minute minority better off, the alteration is: (w) good for society because it made some people better off. (x) bad for society since only a few people ar