The Law Magazine and Law Review, Or, Quarterly Journal of Jurisprudence, Volumes 1-2Butterworths, 1856 - Law |
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Page 1
... Nature and Nations , at Heidelberg , and afterwards at Lund . He died in 1694 , at Berlin . He discussed Natural Law as a separate question , independent of the obligations of Revealed Religion or Positive Civil Law . His works are ...
... Nature and Nations , at Heidelberg , and afterwards at Lund . He died in 1694 , at Berlin . He discussed Natural Law as a separate question , independent of the obligations of Revealed Religion or Positive Civil Law . His works are ...
Page 3
... nature . Puffendorf does not assent to the doctrine of some writers , that there are several things honest , or dishonest , of themselves . He argues that dishonesty and turpitude are affections of human deeds , arising from their ...
... nature . Puffendorf does not assent to the doctrine of some writers , that there are several things honest , or dishonest , of themselves . He argues that dishonesty and turpitude are affections of human deeds , arising from their ...
Page 4
... nature does not depend upon the consent of nations , but the principles of right are to be discovered by natural reason . The dictates of right reason are true principles , which agree with the nature of things , well observed and ...
... nature does not depend upon the consent of nations , but the principles of right are to be discovered by natural reason . The dictates of right reason are true principles , which agree with the nature of things , well observed and ...
Page 5
... nature itself , but the means , upon a right application of which , that law is to be discovered . Puffendorf discusses the proposition , whether the law of nations be distinct from the law of nature . Hobbes divided natural law into the ...
... nature itself , but the means , upon a right application of which , that law is to be discovered . Puffendorf discusses the proposition , whether the law of nations be distinct from the law of nature . Hobbes divided natural law into the ...
Page 6
... nature . The word " man " is thought to carry dignity in its sound , and is commonly resorted to as the last argument against an insult . Under natural equality , how much soever a man may surpass his neighbours as to bodily or ...
... nature . The word " man " is thought to carry dignity in its sound , and is commonly resorted to as the last argument against an insult . Under natural equality , how much soever a man may surpass his neighbours as to bodily or ...
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