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

    Page [unnumbered]

    • ...
      • 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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