| George K. Staropoli - 2003 - 180 páginas
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| Michael Cook, M. A. Cook - 2003 - 204 páginas
...William Blackstone (d. 1780), in his celebrated treatise on the laws of England, defines municipal law as 'a rule of civil conduct prescribed by the supreme...commanding what is right and prohibiting what is wrong'. His definition echoes one already adopted in antiquity by the Stoics. Thus Chrysippus (d. 207 BC) opened... | |
| Georg Jellinek - 1999 - 434 páginas
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| Robert W. Emerson - 2004 - 728 páginas
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| William Livesey Burdick - 2004 - 770 páginas
...force.8 Blackstone defined municipal law, meaning by that term the laws of a state or nation, to be "a rule of civil conduct prescribed by the supreme...state commanding what is right and prohibiting what is wrong."9 Mr. Justice Eoane of the Court of Appeals of Virginia, however, has said:10 "It is evident... | |
| Lysander Spooner - 2004 - 148 páginas
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| Herman Koren - 2016 - 716 páginas
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| David Lemmings - 2005 - 278 páginas
...Blackstone,26 who himself put forward a strongly positivist conception of law. Municipal law, he wrote, was 'a rule of civil conduct prescribed by the supreme...commanding what is right and prohibiting what is wrong'. In all governments, there must be 'a supreme, irresistible, absolute, uncontrolled authority, in which... | |
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