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| Alphabetical [« »] principally 1 principle 3 prisons 2 private 22 privilege 4 privileges 2 probable 1 | Frequency [« »] 22 done 22 indeed 22 make 22 private 22 subjects 21 divine 21 liberty | John Locke A letter concerning toleration IntraText - Concordances private |
Part
1 1| magistrate, nor ought any private persons at any time to use 2 1| men’s money.~Secondly, no private person has any right in 3 1| the mutual toleration of private persons differing from one 4 1| relation to each other as private persons among themselves: 5 1| in the same manner as by private persons, without any pretence 6 1| exhort all men, whether private persons or magistrates ( 7 1| of eternal salvation. In private domestic affairs, in the 8 1| the magistrate than every private man’s search and study discovers 9 1| most commodious way for private persons is to follow his 10 1| to the magistrate than to private persons, and therefore I 11 1| as cannot be done by each private man apart.~These religious 12 1| course of life, nor in any private house; and therefore neither 13 1| the security of each man’s private possessions; for the peace, 14 1| unlawful to the conscience of a private person?” I answer that, 15 1| out, I say, that such a private person is to abstain from 16 1| for him to bear. For the private judgement of any person 17 1| public good? I answer: As the private judgement of any particular 18 1| obligation of law, so the private judgement (as I may call 19 1| religious conventicles are more private and thereby give opportunity 20 1| some religious meetings be private, who are they (I beseech 21 1| we allow the Jews to have private houses and dwellings amongst 22 1| in public than in their private houses? But if these things