登陆注册
20274400000029

第29章

III. The third seditious doctrine springs from the same root, That Tyrannicide is lawfull; Nay, at this day it is by many Divines, and of old it was by all the Philosophers, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Seneca, Plutarch, and the rest of the maintainers of the Greek, and Roman Anarchies, held not only lawful, but even worthy of the greatest praise. And under the title of Tyrants, they mean not onely Monarchs, but all those who bear the chief rule in any Government whatsoever; for not Pisistratus onely at Athens, but those thirty also who succeeded him, and ruled together, were all called Tyrants. But he, whom men require to be put to death as being a Tyrant, commands either by Right, or without Right; if without Right, he is an enemy, and by Right to be put to death; but then this must not be called the killing a Tyrant, but an enemy: if by Right, then the divine interrogation takes place, Who hath told thee that he was a Tyrant, hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat? For why doest thou call him a Tyrant, whom God hath made a King, except that thou being a private Person, usurpest to thy self the knowledge of good and evill? But how pernicious this opinion is to all governments, but especially to that which is Monarchicall, we may hence discerne, namely, that by it every King, whether good or ill, stands exposed to be condemned by the judgement, and slain by the hand of every murtherous villain.

IV. The fourth adversary opinion to Civill Society, is theirs, who hold, That they who bear Rule are Subject also to the Civill Lawes. Which hath been sufficiently proved before not to be true in the 6. Chap. Artic. 14. from this Argument, That a City can neither be bound to it self, nor to any subject; not to it selfe, because no man can be obliged except it be to another; not to any Subject, because the single wills of the Subjects are contained in the will of the City, insomuch, that if the City will be free from all such obligation, the Subjects will so too; and by consequence she is so. But that which holds true in a City, that must be supposed to be true in a man, or an assembly of men, who have the Supreme Authority, for they make a City, which hath no being but by their Supreme Power. Now that this Opinion cannot consist with the very being of Government, is evident from hence, that by it the knowledge of what is Good and Evill, that is to say, the definition of what is, and what is not against the Lawes, would return to each single Person: Obedience therefore will cease as oft as any thing seemes to be commanded contrary to the Civill Lawes, and together with it, all coercive jurisdiction, which cannot possibly be without the destruction of the very essence of Government. Yet this Errour hath great props, Aristotle, and others; who, by reason of humane infirmity, suppose the Supreme Power to be committed with most security to the Lawes onely; but they seem to have lookt very shallowly into the nature of, Government, who thought that the constraining Power, the interpretation of Lawes, and the making of Lawes, (all which are powers necessarily belonging to Government) should be left wholly to the Lawes themselves. Now although particular Subjects may sometimes contend in judgement, and goe to Law with the Supreme Magistrate, yet this is onely then, when the question is not what the Magistrate may, but what by a certain Rule he hath declared he would doe. As, when by any Law the Judges sit upon the life of a Subject, the question is not whether the Magistrate could by his absolute Right deprive him of his life; but whether by that Law his will was that he should be deprived of it; but his will was, he should, if he brake the Law. else, his will was he should not: This therefore, that a Subject may have an action of Law against his Supreme Magistrate, is not strength of Argument sufficient to prove that he is tyed to his own Lawes. On the contrary, it is evident, that he is not tied to his owne Lawes, because no man is bound to himself. Lawes therefore are set for Titius, and Caius, not for the Ruler: however, by the ambition of Lawyers, it is so ordered, that the Lawes, to unskilfull men seeme not to depend on the Authority of the Magistrate, but their Prudence.

V. In the fifth place, That the Supreme Authority may be divided, is a most fatall Opinion to all Common-weales. But diverse men divide it diverse wayes. For some divide it so as to grant a Supremacy to the Civill Power in matters pertaining to Peace, and the benefits of this life, but in things concerning the salvation of the Soul they transfer it on others. Now, because justice is of all things most necessary to Salvation, it happens, that Subjects measuring justice, not as they ought, by the Civill Lawes, but by the precepts and doctrines of them who, in regard of the Magistrate, are either private mens or strangers, through a superstitious fear dare not perform the obedience due to their Princes, through fear falling into that which they most feared: Now what can be more pernicious to any state, then that men should, by the apprehension of everlasting torments, be deterred from obeying their Princes, that is to say, the Lawes, or from being just? There are also some who divide the Supreme Authority so as to allow the power of War, and Peace, unto one, (whom they call a Monarch) but the right of raising Monies they give to some others, and not to him: But because monies are the sinewes of War, and Peace, they who thus divide the Authority, doe either really not divide it at all, but place it wholly in them, in whose power the money is, but give the name of it to another, or if they doe really divide it, they dissolve the Government: for neither upon necessity can War be waged, nor can the publique Peace be preserved without Money.

同类推荐
  • 四巧工传

    四巧工传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 小隐书

    小隐书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 医学真传

    医学真传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 护法论

    护法论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 形意拳古拳谱

    形意拳古拳谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 霸刀战未休

    霸刀战未休

    霸刀怒,气势斩天涯。诛海妖、斩魔神、挑狼王,入神语书院。刀气纵横,志得意满之时,阴谋陡然而生。是上一世的轮回,还是这一世的因果,略带稚气的容和踏上茫茫未知的成长之路。
  • 吾本红颜:丞相很倾国

    吾本红颜:丞相很倾国

    她是杀手界的雅典娜,水墨,一朝失策她成为‘他’废物?怎么可能成为她的代号!不归谷谷主,武林盟主,第一公子水墨,没错,这才是她吗!重归本家,不受欢迎?没关系!看她如何逆袭!人说:少年丞相南碧笙,一袭白衣倾天下。可这个男人是谁?!干嘛老是挡她的丞相大道!虾米?要她臣服?绝不可能!!某男妖娆一笑:“不是你臣服,是我以身相许。”某女风中凌乱,北静王爷,有点骨气好吗?
  • 邹韬奋散文精品

    邹韬奋散文精品

    《邹韬奋散文精品》是二十世纪中国文学大师邹韬奋的经典散文,有叙事的、有抒情的、有释理的。这些散文文笔手法细腻、结构顺当、条理清晰、内容丰富多彩、语言流畅优美。散文中渗透着作者丰富的社会生活和复杂的内心世界。这本散文集典型而精致、可读性强、细细品味、其乐无穷。内容包括爱与人生、有效率的乐观主义、闲暇的伟力、走狗、个人自由与国家自由、久仰得很!、集中的精力、敏捷准确、随遇而安、坚毅之酬报、干、感情、肉麻的模仿、高兴、办私室等。
  • 倾城妖娆:一只狐狸天外来

    倾城妖娆:一只狐狸天外来

    都说不是为救他了,这邪佞男人非要说要好好感谢?!拜托,她不过是顺手敲晕个女人,谁知竟会是个刺客!人家是来偷东西的,又不是来偷心的,才不要听他的咧……
  • 伊墨

    伊墨

    一代女将军穿越异世,身世的谜团,爱情的纠结,看神医将军这里会为您演绎伊墨和子凌的分分合合。
  • 穿越之:梦回大清

    穿越之:梦回大清

    君楚歌兮妾楚舞,脉脉相看两心苦。曲未终兮袂更扬,君流涕兮妾断肠。21世纪现代女神穿越到清朝,女神变成女神经,成了一代奇葩公主。撒娇卖萌抱大腿没事经常玩玩,迷得阿哥跟着转,讨得皇上欢心,在皇宫横着走都没事,当然也惹了一大群情敌和仇敌,闲来无事跟妃子玩玩心计,跟其它公主格格斗斗嘴。时不时出宫逛逛。小日子舒服的很……但最后她的结局到底是如何?群号:14049233
  • 观心诵经法记

    观心诵经法记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 异界逍遥王

    异界逍遥王

    龙组外围成员寇解风,在一场针对邪教的行动中被炸到了异界的兽人国度。意外得到了火神祝融的离火玄功,又融合了龙族的黄金血脉,强大的力量给他带来了金钱、权势、美女,也带来了无尽的烦恼。在众神的争斗的夹缝之中,看他如何利用自己的智慧与能力,走出一条前所未有的争霸之路!
  • 玺江湖

    玺江湖

    赵客缦胡缨,吴钩霜雪明。银鞍照白马,飒沓如流星。?十步杀一人,千里不留行。事了拂衣去,深藏身与名。……炎黄大陆,九州鼎立,以武为尊,武者夺利,世家争名。夏历元年,炎黄大陆之主夏启令太史司马氏将江湖中武人按爵而分:不入爵位、五等男爵、四等子爵、三等伯爵、二等侯爵、一等公爵、盖世帝者、至尊皇者。并勒令至尊皇者为独一无二之数,盖世帝者合五方之数、一等公为九州之数。自此在江湖中建立了以实力为尊的严格等级制度。时间白如同驹过隙,炎黄大陆发生了沧海桑田之剧变的,夏灭商替,商亡周续。时隔九千年,大陆局势发生了翻天覆地的变化,但是武林中爵位制度却从未改变。
  • 下一轮经济危机2:中国凭什么幸免于难

    下一轮经济危机2:中国凭什么幸免于难

    虽然人们将爆发的危机命名为美国次贷危机、美债危机、欧债危机,可为什么中国的经济同样那么艰难?如果说,中国经济下滑的重要原因在于外部环境的恶化,那为什么中国的股价下跌得比美国和欧洲的大部分国家都要严重呢?作者认为,这一轮经济危机的实质在于创新的停滞。创新停滞导致生产力增长乏力,社会支出大于社会产出,主权债务如雪球般越滚越大。而政府基于社会和经济稳定的诉求,在错误思想的指导下,释放流动性,制造通胀。“货币把戏只能收到表面的一时之效,从长远看它肯定会让国家陷入更深重的灾难。”政府对解决危机的一次次拖延,使危机积蓄力量,蓄势待发。