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Alphabetical    [«  »]
rich 5
riches 4
ridiculous 1
right 42
rightly 1
rights 11
rigour 1
Frequency    [«  »]
43 we
42 into
42 ought
42 right
41 faith
40 commonwealth
40 would
John Locke
A letter concerning toleration

IntraText - Concordances

right

   Part
1 1| about these things is in the right, which of them is guilty 2 1| and that all civil power, right and dominion, is bounded 3 1| civil power alone has a right to do; to the other, goodwill 4 1| country alone would be in the right, and all the rest of the 5 1| unto children by the same right of inheritance as their 6 1| necessarily follows that the right of making its laws can belong 7 1| which no man has any civil right, comes also to cease. For 8 1| no private person has any right in any manner to prejudice 9 1| If any man err from the right way, it is his own misfortune, 10 1| government can give no new right to the church, nor the church 11 1| it, nor does it lose the right of instruction and excommunication 12 1| fundamental and immutable right of a spontaneous society— 13 1| new members, acquire any right of jurisdiction over those 14 1| either of these churches has right to deprive the members of 15 1| power belongs, and by what right? It will be answered, undoubtedly, 16 1| orthodox church which has the right of authority over the erroneous 17 1| dissenting churches were in the right, there would not accrue 18 1| thereby unto the orthodox any right of destroying the other. 19 1| Will any man say that any right can be derived unto a Christian 20 1| Christians, nor give unto them a right which he has not himself. 21 1| their leave) is the only right method of propagating truth, 22 1| cannot by any ecclesiastical right become lawful to any of 23 1| because my hair is not of the right cut; because, perhaps, I 24 1| have not been dipped in the right fashion; because I eat flesh 25 1| Certainly, if we consider right, we shall find that, for 26 1| still doubted which is the right one. Now, neither the care 27 1| the commonwealth, nor the right enacting of laws, does discover 28 1| nature equal. Neither the right nor the art of ruling does 29 1| declared to be of divine right by the doctors of their 30 1| magistrate has the same right to ordain by law that all 31 1| Christians here, can, with any right, be deprived of their worldly 32 1| man does not violate the right of another by his erroneous 33 1| does not give him any new right of imposing laws upon his 34 1| magistrate believe that he has a right to make such laws and that 35 1| the event, but the rule of right.~But to come to particulars. 36 1| effect opposite to the civil right of the community. For example: 37 1| excommunication, as the peculiar right of their hierarchy. That 38 1| communion, I say these have no right to be tolerated by the magistrate; 39 1| That Church can have no right to be tolerated by the magistrate 40 1| conscience is every man’s natural right, equally belonging to dissenters 41 1| them in matters of common right; change the laws, take away 42 1| religion. And, if we consider right, we shall find it to consist


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