Liberty and the Holy City: The Idea of Freedom in English HistoryOberon Press, 1978 - 210 sider |
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Side 83
... nature to be the long conservation of a mans life and members " ; this he does " most untruelly , " for the laws of nature are concerned not with self - interest but with right and wrong . Bramhall agrees that the civil laws must be ...
... nature to be the long conservation of a mans life and members " ; this he does " most untruelly , " for the laws of nature are concerned not with self - interest but with right and wrong . Bramhall agrees that the civil laws must be ...
Side 89
... nature and by 1664 he had completed a treatise on civil magistracy . " The essays on natural law are of unusual importance because they show how at the very outset of his career Locke worked out the principles on which he was later to ...
... nature and by 1664 he had completed a treatise on civil magistracy . " The essays on natural law are of unusual importance because they show how at the very outset of his career Locke worked out the principles on which he was later to ...
Side 103
... nature , whereby that free - will is in some degree regulated and restrained , and gave him also the faculty of reason to discover the purport of those laws . " Neither justice nor injustice is the creature of civil law ; they both ...
... nature , whereby that free - will is in some degree regulated and restrained , and gave him also the faculty of reason to discover the purport of those laws . " Neither justice nor injustice is the creature of civil law ; they both ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
admit answer appeared Areopagitica authority Bagehot belief Bentham bishops Blackstone Burke Burke's Catholic Christian Church civil common concerned conscience consent Crown declared defence desire discipline disobey divorce doctrine duty Ecclesiastical Polity edited Edmund Burke effect England English Essay established evil exercise exists F. H. Bradley Filmer freedom Godwin greatest happiness greatest number H. L. A. Hart hath Henry Henry Sacheverell Hobbes human Ibid individual injustice insists J. O. Urmson James John John of Salisbury John Ponet John Stuart Mill justice king Knox later law of nature Leviathan liberty Locke London magistrate matter means ment Mill Milton moral nation obedience obey obligation pain pamphlets Parliament person pleasure political prerogative prince principles public interest published question reason reformers religion reply resist right and wrong rule Scripture secure social society sovereign sovereignty superior things Thomas Thomas Becket tion Treatise true truth Tyndale unjust virtue Whigs