
Source: The Best That Money Can't Buy: Beyond Politics, Poverty, & War (2002), p. 72
De concordantia catholica (The Catholic Concordance) (1434)
Source: The Best That Money Can't Buy: Beyond Politics, Poverty, & War (2002), p. 72
"In Defense of Self-defense" I (June 20, 1967)
To Die For The People
This is actually from an essay "On Government No. I" that appeared in Franklin's paper, The Pennsylvania Gazette, on 1 April 1736. The author was John Webbe. He wrote about the privileges enjoyed under British rule,
:Thank God! we are in the full enjoyment of all these privileges. But can we be taught to prize them too much? or how can we prize them equal to their value, if we do not know their intrinsic worth, and that they are not a gift bestowed upon us by other men, but a right that belongs to us by the laws of God and nature?
Misattributed
“Laws of justice which Hammurabi, the wise king, established.”
Epilogue to the Code of Hammurabi (translated by Leonard William King, 1910). i like potatoes
Source: Law and Authority (1886), II
Context: As man does not live in a solitary state, habits and feeling develop within him which are useful for the preservation of society and the propagation of the race. Without social feelings and usages life in common would have been absolutely impossible. It is not law which has established them; they are anterior to all law. Neither is it religion which has ordained them; they are anterior to all religions. They are found amongst all animals living in society. They are spontaneously developed by the new nature of things, like those habits in animals which men call instinct. They spring from a process of evolution, which is useful, and, indeed, necessary, to keep society together in the struggle it is forced to maintain for existence.
Article 6
Virginia Declaration of Rights (1776)
1920s, Authority and Religious Liberty (1924)