Lectures on the Philosophy of Law: Designed Mainly as an Introduction to the Study of International Law |
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Page vii
... feel inclined to accept the responsibility , in the university of Francis Hutcheson and Adam Smith , to separate the Jus Naturæ from the Jus Gentium . And not only so , but such a course would have been quite inconsistent with the.
... feel inclined to accept the responsibility , in the university of Francis Hutcheson and Adam Smith , to separate the Jus Naturæ from the Jus Gentium . And not only so , but such a course would have been quite inconsistent with the.
Page 20
... feel so much pleasure as they would if they had endured the burden . The only pleasure which can be taken into account is that of the generations which successively pay the debt . If the debt is cleared off at the end of five or ten cen ...
... feel so much pleasure as they would if they had endured the burden . The only pleasure which can be taken into account is that of the generations which successively pay the debt . If the debt is cleared off at the end of five or ten cen ...
Page 21
... feeling into one of pleasure . But , instead of saying that laws are intended to cause the greatest pleasure to the greatest number , it would be more correct to say that they are designed to cause the least pain to the fewest number ...
... feeling into one of pleasure . But , instead of saying that laws are intended to cause the greatest pleasure to the greatest number , it would be more correct to say that they are designed to cause the least pain to the fewest number ...
Page 32
... feeling of fitness which arises , as often as the act is repeated . Painful acts , or acts which interfere with vital functions , and therefore wrong , gradually disappear , either by being abandoned or by destroying the agents . What ...
... feeling of fitness which arises , as often as the act is repeated . Painful acts , or acts which interfere with vital functions , and therefore wrong , gradually disappear , either by being abandoned or by destroying the agents . What ...
Page 34
... feels the impulse to seek it she is impelled to give it . And suppose , finally , that the child is with- drawn , the instant that the supply is exhausted , when it is satisfied . There are then only two hypotheses possible . Either she ...
... feels the impulse to seek it she is impelled to give it . And suppose , finally , that the child is with- drawn , the instant that the supply is exhausted , when it is satisfied . There are then only two hypotheses possible . Either she ...
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abstract act of parliament ancient antinomies apply become body chap church civilised Cloth common conscious contract conveyance Court of Session courts crime criminal Crown 8vo custom delict doctrine droit duty Edition enforced England English Engravings ethical example existence external fact Fcap freedom Hegel House of Lords human idea of right Illustrations individual injury interfere international law judge judgment judicial Jurisprudence Kant land law of nature law of succession lawyers lecture legal fiction legislation Lord marriage matter merely modern morality municipal law nation natural law object obligation parliament particular paterfamilias philosophy of law physical political positive law possession practical present Professor proprietor punishment question realise recognised reference regarded relation religion religious Roman law rule Scotland servant Sir Henry Maine society things tion treated true unity universal Vict whole wrong
Popular passages
Page 15 - CIVITAS, which is but an artificial man; though of greater stature and strength than the natural, for whose protection and defence it was intended; and in which the sovereignty is an artificial soul...
Page 9 - Those who have experience in exact SURVEY-WORK will best know how to appreciate the enormous amount of labour represented by this valuable book.
Page 9 - ... exact SURVEY-WORK will best know how to appreciate the enormous amount of labour represented by this valuable book. The computations enable the user to ascertain the sines and cosines for a distance of twelve miles to within . half an inch, and this BY REFERENCE TO BUT ONE TABLE, in place of the usual Fifteen minute computations required.
Page 13 - Formula" for the use of Electrical Engineers. Comprising Submarine Electrical Engineering, Electric Lighting and Transmission of Power. By Andrew Jamieson, CE, FRSE Seventh Edition, thoroughly revised by WJ Millar.
Page 16 - Civil law is to every subject those rules which the Commonwealth hath commanded him, by word, writing, or other sufficient sign of the will, to make use of for the distinction of right and wrong; that is to say, of what is contrary and what is not contrary to the rule.
Page 27 - There is a great deal of difference between an innate law, and a law of nature between something imprinted on our minds in their very original, and something that we, being ignorant of, may attain to the knowledge of, by the use and due application of our natural faculties.
Page 12 - ELEMENTS OF METALLURGY. A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE ART OF EXTRACTING METALS FROM THEIR ORES. BY J. ARTHUR PHILLIPS, M.lNST.OE, FCS, FGS, &o.
Page 374 - Praise Him, angels, in the height. Sun and moon, rejoice before Him ; Praise Him, all ye stars of light ; 2 Praise the Lord ! for He hath spoken ; Worlds His mighty voice obeyed. Laws that never shall be broken, For their guidance He hath made.
Page 14 - Part I. Papers relating to Temperature, Elasticity, and Expansion of Vapours, Liquids, and Solids. Part II. Papers on Energy and its Transformations. Part III. Papers on Wave-Forms, Propulsion of Vessels, &c.
Page 23 - Thousand. 8.— PREVENTION BETTER THAN CURE; Or, The Moral Wants of the World we live in.