| Theodore Dwight Woolsey - International law - 1871 - 500 pages
...founded on this, that a people, in the interests of Belf-conservation, or for the sake of self-defense, will, can, or ought to use force against another people....things, and not of persons, which constitutes war ; it id the relation of state to state, and not of individual to individual Between two or more belligerent... | |
| Theodore Dwight Woolsey - 1872 - 504 pages
...founded on this, that a people, in the interests of self-conservation, or for the sake of self-defense, will, can, or ought to use force against another people....consist, are enemies only by accident ; they are not such aa men, they are not even as citizens, they are such solely as soldiers." To the same effect are Talleyrand's... | |
| David Dudley Field - International law - 1872 - 230 pages
...founded on this, that a people, in the interests of self-conservation, or for the sake of self-defense, will, can or ought to use force against another people....persons, which constitutes war ; it is the relation ot State to State, and not of individual to individual. Between two or more belligerent nations, the... | |
| Theodore Dwight Woolsey - International law - 1878 - 568 pages
...self-defense, will, can, or ou^ht to use force against another people. It is the relation of thiugs, and not of persons, which constitutes war; it is the...not such as men, they are not even as citizens, they arc such merely as soldiers." To the same effect are Talleyrand's words in a despatch to Napoleon,... | |
| Theodore Dwight Woolsey - International law - 1879 - 588 pages
...fonnded on this, that a people, in the interests of self-conservation, or for the sake of self-defense, will, can, or ought to use force against another people....men, they are not even as citizens, they are such merely as soldiers." To the same effect are Talleyrand's words in a despatch to Napoleon, of Noeffort... | |
| Theodore Dwight Woolsey - International law - 1879 - 554 pages
...founded on this, that a people, in the interests of self.conservation, or for the sake of self.defense, will, can, or ought to use force against another people....not such as men, they are not even as citizens, they arc such merely as soldiers." effort to obtain justice ; the soldier obstructs the way of the armed... | |
| Theodore Dwight Woolsey - International law - 1891 - 558 pages
...founded on this, that a people, in the interests of self-conservation, or for the sake of self-defense, will, can, or ought to use force against another people. It is the relation of things, nnd not of persons, which constitutes war; it is the relation of state to state, and not of individual... | |
| Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1906 - 938 pages
...from Portalis would confine the enemy character to actual combatants. "War." he said in 1801. "is a relation of State to State, and not of individual...individual. Between two or more belligerent nations the pri-WAB. vate persons of whom those nations are composed are only enemies by accident; they are not... | |
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