The Evolution of Modern LibertyLongmans, Green, and Company, 1904 - 284 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 17
... Positive Law on the one hand and from Moral Law on the other . ( The Moral Law deals with such actions as tend to promote the interests of society or else to become detri- mental to its welfare . ) Actions are morally right or wrong ...
... Positive Law on the one hand and from Moral Law on the other . ( The Moral Law deals with such actions as tend to promote the interests of society or else to become detri- mental to its welfare . ) Actions are morally right or wrong ...
الصفحة 19
... positive laws of the State , the Sophists applied the critical spirit to accepted ethical and religious views . They discriminated between Natural and Positive Law . They taught that positive laws could not be obligatory because they ...
... positive laws of the State , the Sophists applied the critical spirit to accepted ethical and religious views . They discriminated between Natural and Positive Law . They taught that positive laws could not be obligatory because they ...
الصفحة 23
... positive laws and as an ethical guide for human action.3 The jus naturale is entirely different from the jus gentium of the Romans . The latter was the law accord- ing to which foreigners were judged at Rome . It was not a code applying ...
... positive laws and as an ethical guide for human action.3 The jus naturale is entirely different from the jus gentium of the Romans . The latter was the law accord- ing to which foreigners were judged at Rome . It was not a code applying ...
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absolute according Althusius American Revolution asserted authority become believed Bills of Rights body Church citizen civil colonies colonists common compact compact theory conscience consent considers Constituent Assembly constitution contract Contrat Social Declaration of Rights demanded democracy democratic derived despotism doctrines duties England English enjoy established exercise exist famous force form of government France freedom French French Revolution Grotius Hobbes Hooker human Ibid ideas Independents individual liberty influence institutions John Adams jus naturale justice king Law of Nature legislative Locke magistrates mankind ment Milton Mirabeau Montesquieu moral nation Natural Law natural liberty Natural Rights obey originally Parl Parliament person philosophy political positive laws possession principles Pufendorf reason reforms regarded religion religious Roman Roman Law Rousseau ruler Samuel Adams says society sovereign sovereignty spirit supreme theory of Natural things thought tion tyranny tyrants universal views VIII welfare writers