187 



PAGE. 



§ 45 Of the Method and General Principles of Jurisprudence 281 



§ 46 Of Certain Principles of Right, and herein 283 



(1) Of Jural Equality 283 



(2) Of Restitution and Compensation 284 



(3) Of Observance of Custom 284 



(4) Of Contracts or Promises 285 



(5) Of Legislative Acts or Statutes 285 



(6) Of the Philosophic, or Rational, and the Historical 



Methods 286 



Chapter V. 



The Subject of Jurisprudence Continued; and Herein of the Doctrine 

 of Natural Right. 



§ 47 Of Prevailing Misconceptions as to the Nature of Right 289 



§ 48 Statement of the Doctrine of Natural Right 290 



§ 49 Of the Relation Between Natural or Theoretic, and Positive 



Right , 292 



(1) Theoretical Exposition 292 



(2) Historical Verification 292 



§ 50 Historical View of the Doctrine of Natural Right 297 



(1) Aristotle 297 



(2) The Roman Jurists 299 



(3) Leibnitz 299 



(4) The Jurists of Modern Continental Europe 299 



(5) The Common Law Jurists 299 



(6) Comparison of the Civil Law, and the Common 



Law Jurists 300 



Chapter VI. 

 Of the Rights or Just Powers of the State. 



§ 51 Of the State as a Body Politic or Corporation 305 



§ 52 Of the Distinction Between the Internal and the External 



Rights of the State, and herein 306 



Of International Law or Right 307 



§ 53 Of the So-called Private International Law 307 



§54 Of the Distinction Between the Political and the Non-Political 



Rights of the State, and herein, first 308 



Of the Non-Political or Social Rights of the State 309 



§ 55 Of the Political Rights of the State 309 



§ 56 Of the Limit to the Political Rights of the State 309 



