If to any people it be the avowed object of policy, in all its internal refinements, to secure the person and the property of the subject, without any regard to his political character, the constitution indeed may be free, but its members may likewise... An Essay on the History of Civil Society - Page 366de Adam Ferguson - 1809 - 464 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Paul Anthony Rahe - 1994 - 408 pages
...people it be the avowed object of policy, in all its internal refinements, to secure the person and property of the subject, without any regard to his...the freedom they possess, and unfit to preserve it." Indeed, "if the pretensions to equal justice and freedom should terminate in rendering every class... | |
| Andrew Ashfield, Peter de Bolla - 1996 - 332 pages
...men. If to any people it be the avowed object of policy, in all its internal refinements, to secure the person and the property of the subject, without...their separate pursuits of pleasure, which they may now enjoy with little disturbance; or of gain, which they may preserve without any attention to the... | |
| Martin van Gelderen, Quentin Skinner - 2005 - 420 pages
...colleagues: If to any people it be the avowed object of policy, in all its internal refinements, to secure the person and the property of the subject, without...the freedom they possess, and unfit to preserve it ... If this be the end of political struggles, the design, when executed, in securing to the individual... | |
| Martin van Gelderen, Quentin Skinner - 2002 - 428 pages
...colleagues: If to any people it be the avowed object of policy, in all its internal ref1nements, to secure the person and the property of the subject, without...the freedom they possess, and unfit to preserve it ... If this be the end of political struggles, the design, when executed, in securing to the individual... | |
| Lisa Hill - 2006 - 312 pages
...says: 'If to any people it be the avowed object of policy, in all its internal refinements, to secure the person and the property of the subject, without...their separate pursuits of pleasure, which they may now enjoy with little disturbance; or of gain, which they may preserve without any attention to the... | |
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