| Jean-Jacques Rousseau - Political science - 1915 - 552 pages
...faith or morals no law can possibly permit.' Areopagitica; Milton, Prose Works, p. 118 (ed. 1835). 2 'That Church can have no right to be tolerated which is constituted upon such a bottom that all those who enter into it do thereby ipso facto deliver themselves up to the protection and service of... | |
| Thomas Williams Bicknell - Rhode Island - 1915 - 248 pages
...religious community, the civil magistrate has no right of restraint." Locke declared, "No opinions contrary to human society, or to those moral rules which are necessary to human society, are to be tolerated by the magistrate." "Religious orthodox persons, who claim for themselves... | |
| Sterling Power Lamprecht - 1918 - 186 pages
...community." u The cases in which toleration should not be extended are four:15 (i) "No opinions contrary to human society or to those moral rules which are...civil society are to be tolerated by the magistrate." Such opinions are, however, very rare; for the welfare of the individual would be lost with the overthrow... | |
| John Morley - 1921 - 186 pages
...much more in the same excellent vein. But Locke fixed limits to toleration. 1. No opinions contrary to human society, or to those moral rules which are...civil society, are to be tolerated by the magistrate. Thus, to take examples from our own day, a conservative minister would think himself right on this... | |
| John Locke - Knowledge, Theory of - 1928 - 436 pages
...place to God and afterwards to the laws. But to come to particulars. I say, first, no opinions contrary to human society or to those moral rules which are...civil society are to be tolerated by the magistrate. But of those indeed examples in any church are rare. For no sect can easily arrive to such a degree... | |
| George Sternlieb, Lynne B. Sagalyn, Lynne B. Sagalyn - 292 pages
...matters of religion, but nevertheless the civil magistrates have the right to suppress what is 'contrary to human society or to those moral rules which are necessary to the preservation of civil society' and he expressly excludes from toleration those religions which do not extend toleration to the faiths... | |
| Elizabeth I. Nybakken - Religion - 1980 - 252 pages
...the Magistrate has a Right to prohibit the propagating of Opinions or Doctrines, which are contrary to human Society, or to those moral Rules, which are necessary to the preservation of human Society.' "Dr. Chandler's Appeal.—Page 31. 'See Appeal, throughout. 'Ibid: Page 109. NOTES:... | |
| Arif Dirlik, Vinay Bahl, Peter Gran - History - 2000 - 534 pages
...the peace of society need not be tolerated. So, for example, Locke declares that "No Opinion contrary to human society, or to those moral Rules which are...preservation of Civil Society, are to be tolerated by the Magistrate."12 (Locke has no doubt that such a core morality is politically essential.) Nor should... | |
| Richard Ashcraft - Philosophy - 1986 - 644 pages
...hierarchists" (Morrice, 2:90). 141 Works, 5:27; Toleration, p. 99. 142 TT, preface; FT, pars. 3, 10. or to those moral rules which are necessary to the preservation of civil society," Locke argues, "are to be tolerated by the magistrate." As he recognizes, however, since it would be... | |
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