About
A system of right or justice held to be common to all humans and derived from nature rather than from social rules. In the early modern period, it was fundamental to the development of international law and ethics.
Connections
Other entities that appear in the same books as Law of Nature.
Appears in 77 Books
Origen / Gulielmus Spencerus (ed.)
Pico della Mirandola, Giovanni
Pico della Mirandola, Giovanni
Eoin MacNeill
Giovanni Boccaccio
Jakob Böhme
Tritheim, Johann
Staupitz, Johannes von
Teellinck, Willem
Léger, Jean
Erasmus, Desiderius
Zimmermann, Johann Jacob
Simonetti, Christian Ernst
Schwenckfeld, Caspar
Comenius, Jan Amos
Intorcetta, Prosperus|Herdtrich, Christianus|Rougemont, Franciscus Couplet, Philippus
Labadie, Jean de
Stukeley, William
Thomas More; trans. Gilbert Burnet
Tritheim, Johann
Léger, Jean
Eoin MacNeill
Giordano Bruno
Synesius of Cyrene
Bacon, Francis
Adam Ferguson
Thomas Sprat
Seneca; Bouillet (ed.)
Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Bacon, Francis
Christian Wolff
Nehemiah Grew
Koek, Gerrit, fl.1662
Arnobius the Younger
Antoine Monastier
Hugo Grotius
Jakob Böhme
Thomas Hobbes
[Pordage, John?]
[Beyerlé, Jean Pierre Louis de]
anonymous
Paracelsus, Theophrastus
[Castellio, Sebastiano]
Brakel, Wilhelmus a
[Castellio, Sebastiano]
Christian Wolff