 | Andrew Altman - 1993 - 226 str.
...Treatise of Government, Locke expressed his commitment in these words: [F]reedom of men under government is to have a standing rule to live by, common to every...subject to the inconstant, uncertain, unknown, arbitrary will of another man.8 Locke went on to argue that the legislative or supreme authority cannot assume... | |
 | Peter Minowitz - 1993 - 376 str.
...Even Locke shows more interest than Smith does in the will, defining freedom under government as the "liberty to follow my own will in all things where...subject to the inconstant, uncertain, unknown, arbitrary will of another" (sec. 22). In identifying government with oppression by the rich of the poor, however,... | |
 | L. T. Hobhouse - 1993 - 212 str.
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 | Stephen Holmes - 1993 - 356 str.
...diemselves. Liberty dierefore is inextricably intertwined widi audiority: "Freedom of Men under Government, is, to have a standing Rule to live by, common to...and made by the Legislative Power erected in it." 8 To repeat, freedom means living according to a single system of general rules, enacted by an elected... | |
 | Robert Andrews - 1993 - 1216 str.
...Quoted in: Leon Harris. The Fine Art of Political Wit. ch. 12 (1964). 22 Freedom of men under government hin the narrow seas, as it seems, to have much space tor vested in it; a liberty to follow my own will in all things, when the rule prescribes not, and not... | |
 | James Tully - 1993 - 354 str.
...terms of the absence of law. Although Locke mentions the point that part of civil liberty comprises 'a liberty to follow my own Will in all things, where the Rule prescribes not', this is introduced primarily to distinguish civil liberty from being subject to the 'arbitrary Will'... | |
 | William James Booth - 1993 - 336 str.
...political thought, where the body politic is said to consist of those under a "common established Law," who have "a standing Rule to live by, common to every one of that Society." Political power as the rightful exercise of authority over life and death thus takes on yet another... | |
 | H. L. Pohlman - 1993 - 346 str.
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 | James O'Toole - 1995 - 190 str.
...of the Declaration, are points to which we shall return.) Still. Locke's definition of freedom. as ''a liberty to follow my own will in all things where the [law] prescribes not." leaves unresolved the problem of obeying unjust laws. After all. the people... | |
 | Dena Goodman - 1994 - 356 str.
...the salonnière's role in enforcing them. "The freedom of men under government," Locke had written, "is to have a standing rule to live by, common to...and made by the legislative power erected in it." "Where there is no law," he declared, "there is no freedom."72 Montesquieu, too, had grounded political... | |
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