| Marcus Tullius Cicero - 1841 - 626 páginas
...neither excogitated by the genius of men, nor is it any thing discovered in the progress of society; but a certain eternal principle, which governs the...is right, and prohibiting what is wrong. Therefore, that aboriginal and supreme law is the Spirit of God himself; enjoining virtue, and restraining vice.... | |
| Marcus Tullius Cicero - 1853 - 532 páginas
...it appears to me, has been the decision of the wisest philosophers, — that law was neither a thing contrived by the genius of man, nor established by...it is, that this law, which the Gods have bestowed on the human race, is so justly applauded. For it is the reason and mind of a wise Being equally able... | |
| Joseph Parrish Thompson - 1860 - 382 páginas
...it appears to me, has been the decision of the wisest philosophers — that law was neither a thing contrived by the genius of man, nor established by...forbidding each separate thing in accordance with reason. . . . The existence of moral obligation is coeternal with that of the divine mind. Therefore the true... | |
| Alexander Robertson (of Dun Donnochy.) - 1864 - 122 páginas
...as it appears to me, has been the decision of the wisest philosophers, that law was neither a thing contrived by the genius of man, nor established by...but a certain eternal principle which governs the universe, wisely commanding what is right and prohibiting what is wrong. Therefore they called that... | |
| 1876 - 860 páginas
...it appears to me, has been the decision of the wisest philosophers — that law was neither a thing contrived by the genius of man, nor established by any decree of the people, but a certain external principle, which governs the entire universe, wisely commanding what is right and prohibiting... | |
| George Park Fisher - 1877 - 620 páginas
...neither excogitated by the genius of men, nor is it anything discovered in the progress of society; but a certain eternal principle which governs the...commanding what is right, and prohibiting what is wrong.'1 * As we shall see hereafter, the doctrine of a Natural Law, the expression of general justice... | |
| Marcus Tullius Cicero - 1878 - 548 páginas
...it appears to me, has been the decision of the wisest philosophers, — that law was neither a thing contrived by the genius of man, nor established by...it is, that this law, which the Gods have bestowed on the human race, is so justly applauded. For it is the reason and mind of a wise Being equally able... | |
| Charles Beecher - 1879 - 336 páginas
...compose one vast association. It is this noble conception of law as an eternal principle governing the entire universe, wisely commanding what is right and prohibiting what is wrong, which is the proudest characteristic of Roman civilization, and which will be its best legacy to future... | |
| 1876 - 870 páginas
...as it appears to me, has been the decision of the wisest philosophers—that law was neither a thing contrived by the genius of man, nor established by any decree of the people, but a certain external principle, which governs the entire universe, wisely commanding what is right and prohibiting... | |
| Samuel Cox, Sir William Robertson Nicoll, James Moffatt - 1898 - 488 páginas
...which governs the entire universe, wisely commanding and forbidding. Therefore they called that primal and supreme law the mind of God enjoining or forbidding...which account it is that this law, which the gods have given to the human race, is so justly praised. For it is the reason and mind of a wise Being equally... | |
| |