| Knud Haakonssen - 1989 - 254 頁
...is referred to as 'a system of what might properly be called natural jurisprudence, or a theory of the general principles which ought to run through and be the foundation of the laws of all nations' (TMS, VH, iv, § 37). This is repeated at the end of the section. 71 The laws of nations constitute... | |
| Adam Smith - 1822 - 350 頁
...afcertain the philofophical principles of jurifprudence ; or (as Mr. SMITH exprcfles it) to afcertain " the general principles which ought to run through...prejudices of the people are widely at variance with thefc principles, the political liberty which the conftitution beftows, only furaimes them with the... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - 1993 - 872 頁
...aim at establishing a system of what might properly be called natural jurisprudence, or a theory of the general principles which ought to run through and be the foundation of the laws of all nations. . . I shall in another discourse endeavour to give an account of the general principles of law and... | |
| Istvan Hont, Michael Ignatieff - 1983 - 388 頁
...for example, in codes of beneficence. The theory of natural justice provided a normative basis for the 'general principles which ought to run through...and be the foundation of the laws of all nations'. It was designed to show that universal rules could be established on the basis of constant principles... | |
| W. W. Rostow - 1992 - 733 頁
...early Theory of Moral Sentiments, we too must try — in a post-Cold War world — to help rethink "the general principles which ought to run through...and be the foundation of the laws of all nations." As Keynes once reminded us, we are not the trustees of civilization but of the possibility of civilization.... | |
| Peter Minowitz - 1993 - 376 頁
...natural rules of justice independent of all positive institutions"; it attempts to provide "a theory of the general principles which ought to run through,...and be the foundation of, the laws of all nations." As we have seen, Smith laments the late date at which "the philosophy of law was treated of by itself,... | |
| Robin Paul Malloy, Jerry Evensky - 1994 - 250 頁
...by his contemporaries.13 For Smith, the purpose of natural jurisprudence was to provide 'a theory of the general principles which ought to run through and be the foundation of the laws of all nations."4 To the unwary legal historian, this suggests a link with the legislative projects of codification... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - 1993 - 664 頁
...laws of police," and "not of justice," it being only with Grotius that those "rules of natural equity" which "ought to run through, and be the foundation of. the laws of all nations" can first be discerned. This passage occurs on the last page of Smith' s book,5 where he promises the... | |
| Jerry Z. Muller - 1995 - 292 頁
...p. 397; LJ (A), p. 5; and TMS, VII.iv.37, p. 341, where natural jurisprudence is called "a theory of the general principles which ought to run through and be the foundation of the laws of all nations." 5. LJ (B), p. 402. See the discussion in Haakonssen, Science, pp. 54-62, to whose work I am much indebted... | |
| Knud Haakonssen - 1996 - 404 頁
...directly with Smith, we find him adopting Smithian principles with much firmness: It is evident . . . that the most important branch of political science...run through and be the foundation of the laws of all nations.'68 It is therefore by no means clear that Stewart rejects the idea of natural jurisprudence... | |
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