Formatted contents note |
Chapter 1,<br/>The Juridical Art,<br/>The Virtue of Justice,<br/>Chapter2,<br/>Analysis of Justice and of that which is just,<br/>the point of Departure,<br/>Things are Apportioned,<br/>Things stand or may stand in the sphere of power of other persons,<br/>The definition of justice: to give to each person that which is his own,<br/>To give,<br/>to each person,,<br/>that which is his own,<br/>That which is just,<br/>the concept,<br/>the Right as that which is just,<br/>The just under the aspects of equality,<br/>The title, the foundation, and the measure of that which is just,<br/>The relation of Justice,<br/>Fundamental types of relations of justice,<br/>The debt between persons (Commutative justice),<br/>The debt of the collectivity to the individual (Distributive justice),<br/>The debt of the individual to the collectivity (legal Justice),<br/>The foundation of Right,<br/>The fair and Equity,<br/>the unjust and injustice,<br/>The concept of injustice,<br/>Types of injustice,<br/>The unjust and harm from injustice,<br/>Restitution,<br/>Compensation,<br/>Chapter3,<br/>Division of right,<br/>Existence of natural right,<br/>Existence of natural titles,<br/>Existence of natural measures,<br/>Human nature and the nature of things in determining the natural right,<br/>Types of natural rights,<br/>Original rights and subsequent rights,<br/>Primary rights and derived rights,<br/>Natural rights as goods and their measures,<br/>Which goods constitute natural rights?,<br/>Natural measure of rights,<br/>Human nature and the historical perspective in relation to natural rights,<br/>Nature and the historical perspective,<br/>Influence of the historical perspective of natural rights,<br/>Limits of the historical perspective,<br/>Abstraction and the connection regarding natural rights,<br/>positive right,<br/>Relations between natural right and positive right,<br/>Chapter 4,<br/>The subject of right,<br/>The person in the Juridical sense,<br/>Juridical Relations,<br/>Chapter 5,<br/>The Juridical Rule,<br/>the Norm and its relation to that which is just,<br/>The Juridical Norm,<br/>The natural juridical rule,<br/>Some premises,<br/>The existence of natural law,<br/>The basis of natural law: The ends of man,<br/>the Descriptive definition of natural law,<br/>The obligatoriness of natural law,<br/> How to cognize Natural law?,<br/>The structure of natural law,<br/>The variety of the percepts of natural law,<br/>The universality of natural law,<br/>Human nature and the historical perspective regarding the precepts of natural law,<br/>Natural law and freedom,<br/>Natural law and human law,<br/>Natural Juridical Law,<br/>Types of natural juridical norms,<br/>Chapter7,<br/>Natural Juridical law and positive law,<br/>Chapter 8 ,<br/>the science of natural rights<br/> |