Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects: essays, moral, political and literary, Band 1Bell & Bradfute, 1825 - 544 Seiten |
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Seite 8
... laws indulge us in such a liberty , seems to be derived from our mixed form of government , which is neither wholly monarchical , nor wholly republi- can . It will be found , if I mistake not , a true observation in politics , that the ...
... laws indulge us in such a liberty , seems to be derived from our mixed form of government , which is neither wholly monarchical , nor wholly republi- can . It will be found , if I mistake not , a true observation in politics , that the ...
Seite 9
... law , cus- tom , and religion concur , all of them , to make the people fully satisfied with their condition , the monarch cannot en- tertain any jealousy against his subjects , and therefore is apt to indulge them in great liberties ...
... law , cus- tom , and religion concur , all of them , to make the people fully satisfied with their condition , the monarch cannot en- tertain any jealousy against his subjects , and therefore is apt to indulge them in great liberties ...
Seite 10
... laws . No action must be deemed a crime but what the law has plainly determined to be such : No crime must be imputed to a man but from a legal proof before his judges ; and even these judges must be his fellow - subjects , who are ...
... laws . No action must be deemed a crime but what the law has plainly determined to be such : No crime must be imputed to a man but from a legal proof before his judges ; and even these judges must be his fellow - subjects , who are ...
Seite 13
... laws , and of particular forms of government , and so little dependence have they on the humours and tempers of men , that consequences almost as general and certain may sometimes be deduced from them , as any which the mathematical ...
... laws , and of particular forms of government , and so little dependence have they on the humours and tempers of men , that consequences almost as general and certain may sometimes be deduced from them , as any which the mathematical ...
Seite 15
... laws for a moment . The nobles will preserve their authority over the people , but without any grievous tyranny , or any breach of private property ; because such a tyrannical government promotes not the interests of the whole body ...
... laws for a moment . The nobles will preserve their authority over the people , but without any grievous tyranny , or any breach of private property ; because such a tyrannical government promotes not the interests of the whole body ...
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