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" Natural Law is the Dictate of Right Reason, indicating that any act, from its agreement or disagreement with the rational [and social*] nature [of man] has in it a moral turpitude or a moral necessity ; and consequently that such act is forbidden or commanded... "
An Institute of the Law of Scotland: In Four Books : in the Order of Sir ... - Página 4
por John Erskine - 1824
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Grotius on the Rights of War and Peace: an Abriged Translation, Volumen1

Hugo Grotius - 1853 - 544 páginas
...a like distinction. X. 1 Natural Law is the Dictate of Right Reason, indicating that any act, from its agreement or disagreement with the rational [and social*] nature [of man] has in it a moral turpitude or a moral necessity ; and consequently that such act is forbidden or commanded...
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Lectures, Legal, Political, and Historical: On the Sciences of Law and ...

Alexander Robertson - 1889 - 468 páginas
...as given by Grotius, is in these words: " It is the dictate of reason; and an action is good or bad by its agreement or disagreement with the rational and social nature of man." Whatever is ordered or prescribed by reason must be right. No doubt, the reason or the intellect of...
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Introduction to the Study of International Law: Designed as an Aid in ...

Theodore Dwight Woolsey - 1897 - 564 páginas
...1, § 10) defines it to be " the JTW »ative Dictate of Right Reason, indicating that any act, from its agreement or disagreement with the rational and social nature [of man], has in it a moral1 turpitude or a moral necessity ; and consequently that such act is forbidden or...
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The Social Compact: A Guide to Some Writers on the Science and Art of ...

Robert Warden Lee - 1898 - 140 páginas
...Society." 4. Natural Law defined. " Natural Law is the Dictate of Right Reason indicating that any act from its agreement or disagreement with the rational [and social] nature of man has in it a moral turpitude or a moral necessity ; and consequently that such act is forbidden or commanded...
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The World's Best Essays, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, Volumen5

David Josiah Brewer, Edward Archibald Allen, William Schuyler - 1900 - 464 páginas
...and countries. WHAT IS LAW? NATURAL Law is the Dictate of Right Reason, indicating that any act, from its agreement or disagreement with the rational (and social) nature (of man) has in it a moral turpitude or a moral necessity; and, consequently, that such act is forbidden or...
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History of the Roman-Dutch Law

Sir Johannes Wilhelmus Wessels - 1908 - 822 páginas
...in the Introduction, Aangeboren Recht, as the dictate of Right Reason, indicating that any act from its agreement or disagreement with the rational and social nature of man has in it a moral turpitude or a moral necessity, and consequently that such an act is forbidden or...
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Readings in Roman Law and the Civil Law and Modern Codes as Developments ...

Roscoe Pound - 1914 - 176 páginas
...BELLI ET PACis,1 I, 1, 10. Natural law is the dictate of right reason, indicating that any act, from its agreement or disagreement with the rational and social nature of man has in it a moral turpitude or a moral necessity, and consequently that such act is forbidden or commanded...
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International Law

Frederick Edwin Smith Earl of Birkenhead - 1918 - 464 páginas
...aut vetari aut prsecipi. (Natural law is the dictate of right reason, indicating that any act, from its agreement or disagreement with the rational [and social] nature [of man], has in it a moral turpitude or a moral necessity; and consequently that such act is forbidden or commanded...
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History of the Roman-Dutch Law

J. W. Wessels, Johannes Wilhelmus Wessels - 2005 - 808 páginas
...in the Introduction, Aangeboren Recht, as the dictate of Right Reason, indicating that any act from its agreement or disagreement with the rational and social nature of man has in it a moral turpitude or a moral necessity, and consequently that such an act is forbidden or...
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Hugonis Grotii de Jure Belli Et Pacis

506 páginas
...a like distinction. X. 1 Natural Law is the Dictate of Right Reason, indicating that any act, from its agreement or disagreement with the rational [and social*] nature [of man] has in it a moral turpitude or a moral necessity ; and consequently that such act is forbidden or commanded...
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