Book XXIII. Of Laws in the Relation They Bear to the Number of Inhabitants 1. Of Men and Animals wi...
2009-10-04
19. Of lending upon Interest. Specie is the sign of value. It is evident that he who has occasion f...
25. The same Subject continued. Europe, it is true, has for these two ages past greatly increased it...
19. Of the Depopulation of the Globe. All these little republics were swallowed up in a large one, a...
Book XXIV. Of Laws in relation to Religion Considered in Itself, and in its Doctrines 1. Of Religio...
Book XXV. Of Laws in Relation to the Establishment of Religion and its External Polity 1. Of Religi...
When religion absolves the mind by a thing merely accidental, it loses its greatest influence on ma...
Book XXVI. Of Laws in Relation to the Order of Things Which They Determine 1. Idea of this Book. Me...
10. The same Subject continued. As there are scarcely any but persecuting religions that have an ex...
19. That we should not decide those Things by the civil Law which ought to be decided by domestic L...
10. In what Case we ought to follow the civil Law which permits, and not the Law of Religion which ...
Book XXVII. 1. Of the Origin and Revolutions of the Roman Laws on Successions. This affair derives...
Book XXVIII. Of the Origin and Revolutions of the Civil Laws among the French 1. Different Characte...
It is a misfortune inherent in humanity that legislators should be sometimes obliged to enact laws ...
19. A new Reason of the Disuse of the Salic and Roman Laws, as also of the Capitularies. I have alr...