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Alphabetical    [«  »]
law-making 2
lawful 12
lawfully 3
laws 47
lay 4
lead 3
leaders 1
Frequency    [«  »]
50 another
49 power
49 who
47 laws
47 were
46 same
45 say
John Locke
A letter concerning toleration

IntraText - Concordances

laws

   Part
1 1| weal and observation of the laws; and that others, under 2 1| impartial execution of equal laws, to secure unto all the 3 1| anyone presume to violate the laws of public justice and equity, 4 1| into truth; but to give laws, receive obedience, and 5 1| worship, by the force of his laws. For laws are of no force 6 1| the force of his laws. For laws are of no force at all without 7 1| because, though the rigour of laws and the force of penalties 8 1| this church and unto what laws it is subject.~Forasmuch 9 1| it be regulated by some laws, and the members all consent 10 1| the right of making its laws can belong to none but the 11 1| establish by ecclesiastical laws, as absolutely necessary 12 1| which is established upon laws that are not His, and which 13 1| and all ecclesiastical laws to be thereunto confined. 14 1| then shall ecclesiastical laws be established, if they 15 1| obstinately to offend against the laws of the society. For, these 16 1| consists in prescribing by laws and compelling by punishments. 17 1| not become poor or sick? Laws provide, as much as is possible, 18 1| nor the right enacting of laws, does discover this way 19 1| if he that compels me by laws and penalties to enter into 20 1| whether a king that prescribes laws to another man’s religion 21 1| no power to impose by his laws the use of any rites and 22 1| therefore, forbidden by laws, those things ought not 23 1| religion by the means of laws and penalties, there can 24 1| ways offending against the laws of the society, I say, unless 25 1| rooted out of any place by laws, punishments, fire, and 26 1| are nowhere punishable by laws; unless, in certain cases, 27 1| commonwealth and the Church. The laws established there concerning 28 1| Invisible Deity were the civil laws of that people and a part 29 1| that the ecclesiastical laws do there unavoidably become 30 1| another king, against the laws of Empire. The inhabitants 31 1| obliged to submit to their laws; that is, to embrace their 32 1| he became subject to the laws of the commonwealth, by 33 1| things should be enjoined by laws which are not in men’s power 34 1| absurd. But the business of laws is not to provide for the 35 1| welcome. She is not taught by laws, nor has she any need of 36 1| the remedy of the other in laws; and the care of all things 37 1| God and, afterwards to the laws.~But some may ask: “What 38 1| any new right of imposing laws upon his subjects, which 39 1| has a right to make such laws and that they are for the 40 1| from the benefit of the laws, or meet with partial judges; 41 1| common right; change the laws, take away the penalties 42 1| the prince is kind and the laws are favourable to it, how 43 1| the same benefit of the laws, shall become the common 44 1| fear the severity of the laws but those that do injuries 45 1| unto them, contrary to the laws of the Gospel and to the 46 1| and, contrary to all the laws of equity, both human and 47 1| men’s consciences by human laws, may, like fathers of their


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