| Jean Jacques Burlamaqui - 1752 - 398 sivua
...right, by which they are obliged to have an equal regard for each other. The general principle therefore of the law of nations, is nothing more than the general law of fociability, which obliges nations to the fame duties as are prefcribed to individuals. VIII. Thus the law of natural equality,... | |
| John Dickinson - 1774 - 168 sivua
...which establishes a parity of right between them ; and engages them to have the same regard and respect for one another. Hence the general principle of the...of nations is nothing more than the general law of sociability, which obliges all nations that have any intercourse with one another, to practise those... | |
| John Dickinson - 1801 - 468 sivua
...which establishes a parity of right between them ; and engages them to have the same regard and respect for one another. Hence the general principle of the...of nations is nothing more than the general law of sociability, which obliges all nations that have any intercourse with one another, to practise those... | |
| James Wilson - 1804 - 494 sivua
...owes itself — seems to have escaped their attention. " The general principle," says Burlamaqui/ '' of the law of nations, is nothing more than the general law of sociability, which obliges nations to the same duties as are prescribed to individuals. Thus the law... | |
| George Atkinson - 1851 - 166 sivua
...socialitatis, or the custodia socialitatis, of Carneades, Grotius, and others. BuRLAMAQUi 1 says, that the general principle of the Law of Nations is nothing more than the general law of sociality, which obliges all nations that have any intercourse with one another to observe the duties... | |
| Samuel Hazard, John Blair Linn, William Henry Egle, George Edward Reed, Thomas Lynch Montgomery, Gertrude MacKinney, Charles Francis Hoban - 1875 - 836 sivua
...which establishes a parity of rights between them, and engages them to have the same regard and respect for one another. Hence the general principle of the...of nations is nothing more than the general law of sociability, which obliges all nations, that have any intercourse with one another, to practice those... | |
| Edwin De Witt Dickinson - 1918 - 844 sivua
...establishes an equality of right an.ong them, and pledges them to have t ho same regare! and respect for one another. Hence the general principle of the law of nations ir. nothing more than the general 1ал of sociability, which ooligos nations having intercourse with... | |
| Edwin De Witt Dickinson - 1920 - 448 sivua
...which establishes an equality of right among them, and pledges them to have the same regard and respect for one another. Hence the general principle of the...of nations is nothing more than the general law of sociability, which obliges nations having intercourse with one another to the practice of the same... | |
| Cornelius F. Murphy - 1985 - 220 sivua
...which establishes an equality of right among them, and pledges them to have the same regard and respect for one another. Hence the general principle of the...of nations is nothing more than the general law of sociability, which obliges nations having intercourse with one another to the practice of the same... | |
| Bryan-Paul Frost, Jeffrey Sikkenga - 2003 - 852 sivua
...to illumine the principles of the natural law by first chiding Burlamaqui and others who claim that sociability'" or the '"the law of beneficence'" (1:154). To correct the "imperfect conceptions" of... | |
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