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" Spencer's formula of justice, "the liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all," represents the ideal which Amercan law has had before it during its whole existence. "
Works - Page 220
by Herbert Spencer - 1891
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Report of the Proceedings of the ... Annual Meeting of the ..., Volume 30

Missouri Bar Association - 1913 - 244 pages
...related sciences. It has been said that our legal idea of justice is well stated in Spencer's formula: "The liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all." Compare with this Ward's formula of social justice: the satisfaction of everyone's wants so far as...
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Harvard Law Review, Volume 30

1917 - 914 pages
...Adams, in CENTRALIZATION AND THE LAW, 52. 68 "Hence that which we have to express in a precise way is the liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all. This we do by saying: — Every man is free to do that which he wills provided he infringes not the...
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Les bases de la morale et du droit, par l'abbé Maurice de Baets

Maurice de Baets - 1892 - 424 pages
...there are many lives carried on together. « Hence, that which we have to express in a precise way, is the liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all. This we do by saying : — Every man is free to do that wich he wills, provided he infringes not the...
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The Philosophical Review, Volume 1

Jacob Gould Schurman, James Edwin Creighton, Frank Thilly, Gustavus Watts Cunningham - 1892 - 776 pages
...the one to the bounds and the other to the benefits " (p. 43). That is to say, Justice consists in the liberty of each, limited only by the like liberties of all. This law of equa^freedom is the principle of natural equity, the law of nature, to which jurists have...
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The Complete Works of Henry George, Volume 5

Henry George - 1911 - 326 pages
...there are many lives carried on together. Hence, that which we have to express in a precise way is the liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all. This we do by saying, Every man is free to do what he wills, provided he infringes not the equal freedom...
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Social Statics: Abridged and Revised ; Together with The Man Versus the State

Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 448 pages
...breaking it. SECONDARY DERIVATION OF A FIRST PRINCIPLE. THIS first and all-essential law, declaratory of the liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all, is that fundamental truth of which the moral sense gives an intuition, and which the intellect has...
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A Perplexed Philosopher: Being an Examination of Mr. Herbert Spencer's ...

Henry George - 1892 - 346 pages
...there are many lives carried on together. Hence, that which we have to express in a precise way is the liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all. This we do by saying, Every man is free to do what he wills, provided he infringes not the equal freedom...
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Justice: Being Part IV of The Principles of Ethics

Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 324 pages
...there are many lives carried on together. Hence, that which we have to express in a precise way, is the liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all. This we do by saying : — Every man is free to do that which he wills, provided he infringes not the...
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A History Of English Utilitarianism

Ernest Albee - 1902 - 450 pages
...of others having like claims to act.. . . Hence, that which we have to express in a precise way, is the liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all. This we do by saying:—Every man is free to do that which he wills, provided he infringes not the...
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The Life and Letters of Herbert Spencer, Volume 2

David Duncan - 1908 - 676 pages
...needful ; but there came to be recognized a deeper origin for its fundamental principle. The assertion of the liberty of each limited only by the like liberties of all, was shown to imply the doctrine that each ought to receive the benefits and bear the evils entailed...
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