Queen's Quarterly, Том 7Quarterly Committee of Queen's University., 1900 |
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Страница 4
... nation . Sir Henry Maine and others have very clearly pointed out that the natural development of legal ideas begins with law as custom , passes through the stages where custom is supplemented and relieved by equitable maxims and ...
... nation . Sir Henry Maine and others have very clearly pointed out that the natural development of legal ideas begins with law as custom , passes through the stages where custom is supplemented and relieved by equitable maxims and ...
Страница 5
... nation , but at the same time she conceived a strong antipathy to Rome , and refused to participate , openly at least , in the other great benefit she had given to the world . Germany , on the other hand , though she seemed to be the ...
... nation , but at the same time she conceived a strong antipathy to Rome , and refused to participate , openly at least , in the other great benefit she had given to the world . Germany , on the other hand , though she seemed to be the ...
Страница 6
... nation , sought to bring into a nice harmony with life every rule and maxim of their fav- orite pursuit ; and the German jurists have endeavored to carry out the same idea . Therefore , when a system of law is worked out , mainly by ...
... nation , sought to bring into a nice harmony with life every rule and maxim of their fav- orite pursuit ; and the German jurists have endeavored to carry out the same idea . Therefore , when a system of law is worked out , mainly by ...
Страница 8
... nation as a whole is strongly confirmatory of its provisions . Once legis- lation attempts to go beyond this position it invades the field of morality unnecessarily . It proceeds to raise a legal fabric that shall be its own most severe ...
... nation as a whole is strongly confirmatory of its provisions . Once legis- lation attempts to go beyond this position it invades the field of morality unnecessarily . It proceeds to raise a legal fabric that shall be its own most severe ...
Страница 9
... nation was ex- panding , Saxon , Norman and Celt were tacitly agreeing to become Englishmen . Men's minds were directed more and more to overcome the extravagances of a time that had been unsettled . by war and civil strife , and by the ...
... nation was ex- panding , Saxon , Norman and Celt were tacitly agreeing to become Englishmen . Men's minds were directed more and more to overcome the extravagances of a time that had been unsettled . by war and civil strife , and by the ...
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