| 1862 - 720 sayfa
...In progressive societies the history of law presents us with one movement which is uniform. This is the gradual dissolution of family dependency, and...individual obligation in its place. The individual becomes steadily substituted for the family, as the unit of which civil laws take account. Apparent... | |
| William Edward Hearn - 1863 - 500 sayfa
...of development has been attained. " The movement of the progressive societies," says Mr. Maine,* " has been uniform in one respect. Through all its course...the growth of individual obligation in its place." From the simple despotism of the patriarch, from that homogeneous soeial state in which all the relations... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - 1834 - 484 sayfa
...acquiescence which were in unison with the ancient usages, because in fact they were born of them. The movement of the progressive societies has been uniform...which civil laws take account. The advance has been accom plished at varying rates of celerity, and there are societies not absolutely stationary in which... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - 1867 - 494 sayfa
...acquiescence which were in unison with the ancient usages, because in fact they were born of them. The movement of the progressive societies has been uniform...has been distinguished by the gradual dissolution j)f family dependency and the gro\vtlL.Qf..indi\tidual _ obligation in its place. The individual is... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - 1864 - 484 sayfa
...ancient usages, because in fact they were born of them. The movement of the progressive societies haa been uniform in one respect. Through all its course...which civil laws take account. The advance has been accom plished at varying rates of celerity, and there are societies not absolutely stationary in which... | |
| Bernard J. McQuaid, Francis Ellingwood Abbot - 1876 - 114 sayfa
...very close to the verge of the ideas which have at length prevailed in the modern world. . . . The movement of the progressive societies has been uniform...dependency and the growth of individual obligation in its stead. The Individual is steadily substituted for the Family, as the unit of -which civil laws take... | |
| 1878 - 958 sayfa
...family dependency and the growth in its place of individual obligation. As Sir Henry Maine puts it, "The Individual is steadily substituted for the Family as the unit of which civil laws take account." Admitting that society in the United States was based and is formed upon the Individual as the unit,... | |
| R. H. Hollingbery - 1879 - 586 sayfa
...corrupted by contact with barbarism in the dark ages, had again to be recovered by mankind* * (c). The movement of the progressive societies has been uniform...family, as the unit of which civil laws take account. Nor is it difficult APP. I. to see what is the tie hetween man and man, which replaces by degrees those... | |
| Sir R. Arthur Arnold - 1880 - 420 sayfa
...and the growth in its place of individual obligation. As Sir Henry Maine puts it, " The Individual P is steadily substituted for the Family as the unit of which civil laws take account." Admitting that society in the United States was based and is formed upon the Individual as the unit,... | |
| Joseph Cook - 1881 - 390 sayfa
...interesting part of his " Ancient Law " by saying, " The movement of the progressive societies . . . has been distinguished by the gradual dissolution...family, as the unit of which civil laws take account." [Ancient Law, p. 163.] Though he uses the term " family " in a wide sense, it is inclusive of the stricter... | |
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