Observations, censures, and confutations of notorious errours in Mr. Hobbes his Leviathan and other his bookes to which are annexed occasionall anim-adversions on some writings of the Socinians and such hæreticks of the same opinion with him / by William Lucy ...
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Title
Observations, censures, and confutations of notorious errours in Mr. Hobbes his Leviathan and other his bookes to which are annexed occasionall anim-adversions on some writings of the Socinians and such hæreticks of the same opinion with him / by William Lucy ...
Author
Lucy, William, 1594-1677.
Publication
London :: Printed by J.G. for Nath. Brooke ...,
1663.
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Subject terms
Hobbes, Thomas, 1588-1679. -- Leviathan.
State, The.
Political science.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A49440.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Observations, censures, and confutations of notorious errours in Mr. Hobbes his Leviathan and other his bookes to which are annexed occasionall anim-adversions on some writings of the Socinians and such hæreticks of the same opinion with him / by William Lucy ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A49440.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 1, 2024.
Pages
CHAP. XXI.
I. An universal war between all individuals of mankind never yet experimented. 153
Nor proved by Mr. Hobbes's instances. ibid.
II. What in the Passions make's sins which are not such in them∣selves. 154
The severall constitutions in the objects of our Passions what, and whence. ibid.
III. Affected ignorance of the Law a sin. 155
Every man born under a Law-maker, and a Law. ibid.
IV. The Americans have Kings, and justice executed amongst them. 156
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Private families not at war with the Kings and Nations among whom they live. ibid.
The concord of which hath a better dependence then upon lust. ibid.
V. The exorbitances of a Civil war prove not men to be in a po∣lemical state by nature. ibid.
VI. The mutuall jealousies of Soveraignes render them not like Gladiatours, in a direct posture of war. 157
VII. Conscience dictate's to men what is right and wrong: what Law and common Power they must submit to. 158
VIII. Military Valour and Prudence, degenerated into Force and Fraud, lose the nature, and deserve not the name, of the two Cardinal Vertues in war. 159
IX. Justice and Injustice no faculties, but habits, and may be in a military person. 160
X. Nations have propriety in Dominions. 161
Persons in their wives. ibid.
And estates, ibid.
XI. Their title to which may be various. 163
That of Occupancy most evident. ibid.
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