Of the laws or rules set by men to men, some are established by political superiors, sovereign and subject: by persons exercising supreme and subordinate government, in independent nations, or independent political societies. The Province of Jurisprudence Determined - Page 2by John Austin - 1832 - 391 pagesFull view - About this book
| 576 pages
...means he throws off" the vague and unmeaning generality shadowed forth in the term "laws of nature." Of the laws or rules set by men to men, some are established by political superiors, sovereign and subject — others are not established by political superiors, in that capacity. The former class of rules... | |
| John Austin, Sarah Austin - Jurisprudence - 1861 - 492 pages
...expression natural law, I name those laws or rules, as considered collectively or in mass, the Dir • vine law, or the law of God. The laws or rules set by men...independent nations, or independent political societies. The aggregate of the rules thus established, or to some aggregate forming a portion of that aggregate,... | |
| John Austin, Sarah Austin - Law - 1869 - 628 pages
...as considered collectively or in a mass. Human the Divine law, or the law of God. Two'dasses. Laws set by men to men are of two leading or principal...extremely; and which, for that reason, should be severed 1st class, precisely, and opposed distinctly and conspicuously. Of the laws or rules set by men to... | |
| Law - 1874 - 1178 pages
...the inconsistency between them and his definition of positive law and jurisprudence, for he says : " Of the laws or rules set by men to men, some are established by political superiors . . the aggregate of the rules thus established, or some aggregate forming a portion of that aggregate,... | |
| Thomas Hill Green - Philosophy, Modern - 1886 - 612 pages
...distinguished into two classes, according as they are or are not established by political superiors. ' Of the laws or rules set by men to men, some are established...independent nations, or independent political societies ' (pp. 88 and 89) . ' The aggregate of the rules established by political superiors is frequently styled... | |
| Thomas Hill Green - Liberty - 1895 - 286 pages
...distinguished into two classes, according as they are or are not established by political superiors. ' Of the laws or rules set by men to men, some are established...independent nations, or independent political societies' (pp. 88 and 89). 'The aggregate of the rules established by political superiors is frequently styled... | |
| Charles Edward Merriam - Sovereignty - 1900 - 264 pages
...material must be inserted in the "corpus juris" for " reasons of convenience." A knowledge 1 1, Lecture I. "Of the laws or rules set by men to men, some are...by political superiors, sovereign and subject, by exercising supreme and subordinate government, in independent nations or independent political societies.... | |
| Roscoe Pound - Jurisprudence - 1920 - 152 pages
...Anglo-American First Stage. — The imperative theory perfected; eighteenthcentury ideas eliminated. Of the laws or rules set by men to men, some are established...independent nations or independent political societies. The aggregate of the rules thus established, or some aggregate forming a portion of that aggregate, is... | |
| Clarence Morris - Law - 1971 - 588 pages
...those laws or rules, as considered collectively or in a mass, the Divine law, or the law of God. Laws set by men to men are of two leading or principal classes. . . . Of the laws or rules set by men to men, some are established by political superiors, sovereign... | |
| Thomas Hill Green - Law - 1986 - 400 pages
...distinguished into two classes, according as they are or are not established by political superiors. 'Of the laws or rules set by men to men, some are...sovereign and subject; by persons exercising supreme and subordinate^OT'e/7/wf///, in independent nations, or independent political societies . . . the aggregate... | |
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