Treatise on Sociology, Theoretical and Practical

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Lippincott, Grambo & Company, 1854 - 292 sider
 

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Side 251 - Our law considers marriage in no other light than as a civil contract. The holiness of the matrimonial state is left entirely to the ecclesiastical law; the temporal courts not having jurisdiction to consider unlawful marriage as a sin, but merely as a civil inconvenience.
Side xxvi - The law not only regards life and member, and protects every man in the enjoyment of them, but also furnishes him with everything necessary for their support. For there is no man so indigent or wretched, but he may demand a supply sufficient for all the necessities of life from the more opulent part of the community, by means of the several statutes enacted for the relief of the poor, of which in their proper places.
Side 161 - an obligation to labour for the benefit of the master, without the contract or consent of the servant.
Side 63 - to raise and support Armies" and "to provide and maintain a Navy.
Side 287 - When these and more than these, shall be the fulfilment of Warranteeism ; then shall this Federation and the World, praise the power, wisdom, and goodness of a system, which may well be deemed divine; then shall Experience aid Philosophy, and VINDICATE THE WAYS OF GOD, TO MAN.
Side 162 - warrantor" and the "warrantee" shared common interests. As a valuable "material product," the black laborer was appreciated and given sufficient food and necessities. Hence poverty and strikes were absent in the "ordered sovereign
Side 181 - A man has not a right to use his mind and body as he will. . . . Man must do what he ought. ... He cannot as he wills, work or be idle; pursue one, another, or no calling; be dissociate, unadapted or irregular. . . . The freedom of every man is therefore, qualified by a duty. That duty is to use it, as a social being ought. But a social being ought to use his labor socially, or for the existence and progress of all
Side 287 - ... warrantee" society of southern plantation phalanxes. Then, in the plump flush of full-feeding health, the happy warrantees shall banquet in PLANTATION-REFECTORIES; worship in PLANTATION-CHAPELS; learn in PLANTATION-SCHOOLS; or in PLANTATION-SALOONS, at the cool of evening, or the green and bloomy gloom of cold catalpas and magnolias, chant old songs, tell tales; or to the metred rattle of chattering castanets, or flutes, or rumbling tamborines, dance down the moon and evening star, and after...
Side 287 - Treatise with a description of the harmony and happiness which allegedly existed in the "warrantee" society of southern plantation phalanxes. Then, in the plump flush of full-feeding health, the happy warrantees shall banquet in PLANTATION-REFECTORIES; worship in PLANTATION-CHAPELS; learn in PLANTATION-SCHOOLS; or in PLANTATION-SALOONS, at the cool of evening, or the green and bloomy gloom of cold catalpas and magnolias, chant old songs, tell tales; or to the metred rattle of chattering castanets,...
Side 137 - Whatever its maximum, this ought to be its minimum. However the tribute to the class may vary above this; however large it may be; it ought never to vary below: it ought never to be less. All should be warranted their minimum. It should be realized for the whole class; not for efficients only; but for both efficients and inefficients. Each class ought to have for all in it: food of sufficient quantity and quality, raiment for warmth or decency, and habitations fitted to the seasons. The sufficiency...

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