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Front Page Titles (by Subject) ADVERTISEMENT BY THE TRANSLATOR. - Philosophiae moralis institutio compendiaria with a Short Introduction to Moral Philosophy
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE TRANSLATOR. - Francis Hutcheson, Philosophiae moralis institutio compendiaria with a Short Introduction to Moral Philosophy [1747]Edition used:Philosophiae moralis institutio compendiaria with a Short Introduction to Moral Philosophy, edited and with an Introduction by Luigi Turco (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2007).
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- Introduction
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- General Note
- Advertisement By the Translator.
- Juventuti Academicae Salutem.
- To the Students In Universities.
- Philosophiae Moralis Institutio Compendiaria With a Short Introduction to Moral Philosophy
- Philosophiae Moralis Institutio Compendiaria
- Liber I: Ethices Elementa.
- Caput I: De Hominis Natura Ejusque Partibus.
- Caput II: De Summo Bono Et Virtute.
- Caput III: De Variis Virtutum Divisionibus.
- Caput IV: De Virtutibus Et Officiis Erga Deum.
- Caput V: De Officiis Erga Alios Homines Exercendis.
- Caput VI: De Officiis Cujusque Erga Se, Et De Animi Cultura.
- 1 {caput VII: De Virtutis Studio Excitando Et Retinendo.
- Liber II: Jurisprudentiae Naturalis Elementa.
- Caput I: De Lege Naturali.
- Caput II: De Juris Natura Et Divisionibus.
- Caput III: De Virtutum Et Vitiorum Gradibus, Inter Se Comparatis{; Iisque Quae Speciem Moralem Afficiunt}.
- Caput IV: De Jure Privato Naturali.
- Caput V: De Jure Adventitio Reali, Et Rerum Dominio.
- Caput VI: De Dominii Acquirendi Rationibus.
- Caput VII: De Jure Derivato, Ejusque Causis.
- Caput VIII: De Dominii Transferendi Rationibus, Per Contractus, Successiones, Aut Testamenta.
- Caput IX: De Contractibus.
- Caput X: De Sermocinantium Officiis.
- Caput XI: De Jurejurando Et Votis.
- Caput XII: De Rerum Pretio.
- Caput XIII: De Variis Contractuum Generibus Post Pretia Rerum Constituta.
- Caput XIV: De Obligationibus Quasi Ex Contractu Ortis.
- Caput XV: Jura Ex Damno Dato, Atque Ex Aliorum Injuriis Orta. Jura Belli.
- Caput XVI: De Jure Extraordinario Ex Necessitate, Omniumque Jure Communi.
- Caput XVII: De Juris Interitu. De Litibus In Libertate Dirimendis, Et Interpretatione.
- Liber III: Oeconomices Et Politices Elementa.
- Caput I: De Conjugio.
- Caput II: De Parentum Et Liberorum Officiis.
- Caput III: De Herorum Et Servorum Jure.
- Caput IV: De Civitatum Origine Et Causis.
- Caput V: De Interna Civitatum Structura, Et Summi Imperii Partibus.
- Caput VI: De Variis Rerumpublicarum Formis.
- Caput VII: De Summi Imperii Jure, Ejusque Acquirendi Rationibus.
- Caput VIII: De Legibus Condendis, Et De Jurisdictione.
- Caput IX: De Jure Belli.
- Caput X: De Foederibus, Legatis, Et Civitatum Interitu [deletione].
- A Short Introduction to Moral Philosophy.
- Book I: The Elements of Ethicks.
- Chapter I: Of Human Nature and Its Parts.
- Chapter II: Concerning the Supreme Good.
- Chapter III: Concerning the Chief Divisions of Virtue.
- Chapter IV: Our Duties Toward God.
- Chapter V: Our Duties Toward Mankind.
- Chapter VI: Concerning Our Duties Toward Ourselves, and the Improvement of the Mind.
- Chapter VII: Some Practical Considerations to Excite and Preserve the Study of Virtue.
- Book II: Elements of the Law of Nature.
- Chapter I: Of the Law of Nature.
- Chapter II: Of the Nature of Rights, and Their Several Divisions.
- Chapter III: Concerning the Various Degrees of Virtue and Vice, and the Circumstances On Which They Depend.
- Chapter IV: Concerning the Natural Rights of Individuals.
- Chapter V: Of Real Adventitious Rights and Property.
- Chapter VI: The Methods of Acquiring Property.
- Chapter VII: Of Derived Property.
- Chapter VIII: The Methods of Transferring Property, Contracts, Succession, Testaments.
- Chapter IX: Of Contracts In General.
- Chapter X: Our Obligations In Speech.
- Chapter XI: Of Oaths and Vows.
- Chapter XII: Concerning the Values Or Prices of Goods.
- Chapter XIII: Of the Several Sorts of Contracts.
- Chapter XIV: * Obligations Resembling Those From Contracts.
- Chapter XV: Of Rights Arising From Damage Done, and the Rights of War.
- Chapter XVI: Extraordinary Rights In Cases of Necessity, and the Common Rights of Mankind.
- Chapter XVII: How Rights and Obligations Cease: How Controversies Are to Be Decided In Natural Liberty: and the Rules of Interpretation.
- Book III: The Principles of Oeconomicks and Politicks.
- Chapter I: Concerning Marriage.
- Chapter II: The Duties of Parents and Children.
- Chapter III: The Rights of Masters and Servants.
- Chapter IV: The Original of Civil Government.
- Chapter V: The Internal Structure of States: and the Several Parts of Supreme Power.
- Chapter VI: Of the Various Plans of Government.
- Chapter VII: The Rights of the Supreme Power: and the Methods of Acquiring It.
- Chapter VIII: Of Civil Laws and Their Execution.
- Chapter IX: The Laws of War.
- Chapter X: Of Treaties and Ambassadors, and the Entire Dissolution of States.
- Bibliography of Modern Literature
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE TRANSLATOR.
The Author of this book had no inclination that it should be translated, as he wishes that all our students were much enured to the latin tongue, which for the two last centuries, (and in many preceeding, in such style as they had) was the common channel of communication among the Learned through all Europe. He was abundantly aware that such compends, wrote in the most succinct manner their authors could, and yet touching at a great variety of subjects, with hints of the principal topicks of reasoning, must appear very jejune and unpleasant to common readers: not to mention the unavoidable terms of art, which can scarce be turned into easy common language. But he found that the preventing a translation was impossible; as it was designed in London soon after the publication of the first edition. He therefor thought proper it should be rather done in Glasgow. The English reader must excuse the translator in the use of some few latin terms of art in the 2d and 3d books, and in the omission of a section or two relating solely to some latin ways of speaking in the civil law. He has sometimes inserted a short sentence, or added a note or two, to make some points clearer. He needs the readers indulgence too, if, in following the original pretty closely, he sometimes makes sentences too long, or not so smooth and easy as our native tongue would require.
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