The Rights of War and Peace: Including the Law of Nature and of Nations, Volume 2 |
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Page 1
... principles to light the way of sovereigns and peoples in the paths of peace and general concord . I. THE REIGN OF WAR . The idea of peaceful equity among nations , now ac- cepted as a human ideal , though still far from realiza- tion ...
... principles to light the way of sovereigns and peoples in the paths of peace and general concord . I. THE REIGN OF WAR . The idea of peaceful equity among nations , now ac- cepted as a human ideal , though still far from realiza- tion ...
Page 2
... principles . Looking about him at the general havoc which war had made , the nations hostile , the faith of ages shat- tered , the passions of men destroying the commonwealths which nourished them , he saw that Europe possessed but one ...
... principles . Looking about him at the general havoc which war had made , the nations hostile , the faith of ages shat- tered , the passions of men destroying the commonwealths which nourished them , he saw that Europe possessed but one ...
Page 3
... principles of justice . At the close of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries , a series of circumstances arose ne- cessitating the extension of jurisprudence beyond its an- cient boundaries , and thus tending to ...
... principles of justice . At the close of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries , a series of circumstances arose ne- cessitating the extension of jurisprudence beyond its an- cient boundaries , and thus tending to ...
Page 10
... principles of justice , for there is also a body of doctrine based upon CONSENT ; and it is this system of voluntarily recognized obligations which distinguishes international jurisprudence from mere ethical speculation or moral theory ...
... principles of justice , for there is also a body of doctrine based upon CONSENT ; and it is this system of voluntarily recognized obligations which distinguishes international jurisprudence from mere ethical speculation or moral theory ...
Page 14
... were to form a code of public law for Europe , was to a great degree an embodiment of the principles which Grotius was the first to enun- ciate . His " De Jure Belli ac Pacis " had already 14 THE RIGHTS OF WAR AND PEACE.
... were to form a code of public law for Europe , was to a great degree an embodiment of the principles which Grotius was the first to enun- ciate . His " De Jure Belli ac Pacis " had already 14 THE RIGHTS OF WAR AND PEACE.
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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