The Rights of War and Peace: Including the Law of Nature and of Nations, Volume 2 |
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Page 10
... consent of men , would enable us to create a complete system of jurisprudence , there is another source which must not be neglected , since men have established the sanctity of certain rules of conduct by solemn convention . The Law of ...
... consent of men , would enable us to create a complete system of jurisprudence , there is another source which must not be neglected , since men have established the sanctity of certain rules of conduct by solemn convention . The Law of ...
Page 11
Including the Law of Nature and of Nations Hugo Grotius. him by the spontaneous consent of future times as the Father of International Jurisprudence . It is not difficult after more than three centuries of thought and experience to point ...
Including the Law of Nature and of Nations Hugo Grotius. him by the spontaneous consent of future times as the Father of International Jurisprudence . It is not difficult after more than three centuries of thought and experience to point ...
Page 25
... consent of all , or at least of many nations . It was proper to add MANY , because scarce any right can be found common to all nations , except the law of nature , which itself too is generally called the law of nations . Nay ...
... consent of all , or at least of many nations . It was proper to add MANY , because scarce any right can be found common to all nations , except the law of nature , which itself too is generally called the law of nations . Nay ...
Page 31
... consent - The Law of Nature proved not repugnant to War - War not condemned by the voluntary Divine Law preced- ing the Gospel- Objections answered - Review of the question whether War be contrary to the Law of the Gospel - Arguments ...
... consent - The Law of Nature proved not repugnant to War - War not condemned by the voluntary Divine Law preced- ing the Gospel- Objections answered - Review of the question whether War be contrary to the Law of the Gospel - Arguments ...
Page 35
... consent of all , especially , of the wisest nations . There is a celebrated passage in Cicero's speech for Milo , in which , justifying recourse to force in defence of life , he bears ample testimony to the feelings of nature , who has ...
... consent of all , especially , of the wisest nations . There is a celebrated passage in Cicero's speech for Milo , in which , justifying recourse to force in defence of life , he bears ample testimony to the feelings of nature , who has ...
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Common terms and phrases
according actions admitted allies allowed ambassadors ancient argument arising Aristotle arms authority belonging binding bound called capital punishments Carthaginians Christ Christian Cicero civil law command commission committed common consent considered contracts controul crime death debt declaration deemed derived Dion Chrysostom distinction divine enemy engagements equal equity established evil express favour former give given Grotius guilty hostilities human individuals inflicted injury injustice instance intention Jews killed kind king law of nations law of nature liberty Livy maintain manner means ment Mosaic Law motives natural justice necessary oath object obligation observed occasion offences opinion original owner party peace person Plutarch Polybius possession postliminium Princes principles privileges prohibition promise proper punishment Quintilian reason refused repugnant respect restored Roman law rule says Seneca shew sovereign power Strabo Tacitus taken territory thing Thucydides tion treaty Ulpian unjust unlawful violation words writers