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Front Page Titles (by Subject) STATE, The - Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political History of the United States, vol. 3 Oath - Zollverein
STATE, The - John Joseph Lalor, Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political History of the United States, vol. 3 Oath - Zollverein [1881]Edition used:Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political History of the United States by the best American and European Authors, ed. John J. Lalor (New York: Maynard, Merrill, & Co., 1899). Vol 3 Oath - Zollverein
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- Volume III: Oath - Zollverein
- O
- Oath
- Oath of Allegiance
- Occupation
- Oceanica
- Ochlocracy.
- O'conor, Charles
- Office-holders, Danger of an Aristocracy of
- Ohio
- Oligarchy
- Olmstead Case. (see Pennsylvania.)
- Omnibus Bill. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Opinion. (see Public Opinion.)
- Opposition
- Order of the Day. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Orders In Council. (see Embargo, In U. S. History.)
- Orders, Religious . (see Congregations.)
- Ordinance of 1787
- Oregon
- Oriental Question
- Ostend Manifesto
- Outlawry
- Outlet
- Over-production
- P
- Pacific Railroad. (see Internal Improvements, Railroads.)
- Paper Money.
- Paraguay (republic Of).
- Parasites, Social
- Pardon.
- Paris Monetary Conference
- Parley.
- Parliament, the British
- Parliamentary Law.
- Participation In Profits.
- Parties, Political
- Party Government In the United States.
- Party Names In U. S. History. (see American Party, Anti-federal Party, Anti-masonic Party)
- Patent Office
- Patents, and the Patent System.
- Patronage
- Patrons of Husbandry. (see Grangers.)
- Pauperism
- Peace.
- Peace Congress. (see Conference, Peace.)
- Pendleton, George H.
- Penitentiary Systems. (see Prisons and Prison Discipline.)
- Pennsylvania
- Penny Banks. (see Banks, History and Management of Savings.)
- Pensions. (see United States Pension Laws, and the Pension Laws of Other Countries.)
- Persia.
- Personal Liberty Laws
- Personal Union
- Peru
- Petition
- Petition, Right of
- Philosophy of Law
- Physiocrates.
- Pickering, Timothy
- Pierce, Franklin
- Pinckney, Charles Cotesworth
- Pinckney, Thomas
- Piracy
- Plenty and Dearth.
- Poland
- Police
- Police Power of a State
- Political Arithmetic. (see Arithmetic, Political.)
- Political Assessments. (see Assessments, Political.)
- Political Economy.
- Political Economy, History of
- Political Science
- Politics, Nature and Character of
- Polk, James Knox
- Poll Tax
- Popular Sovereignty
- Population.
- Portugal.
- Postoffice
- Postoffice Department
- Postoffice Savings Banks. (see Banks, History and Management of Savings.)
- Powers of Congress. (see Congress, Powers Of.)
- President. (see Executive.)
- President Pro Tem. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Press, the Newspaper and Periodical
- Previous Question. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Prices
- Primary Elections.
- Priority of Debts Due to the United States and to the States
- Prisoners of War
- Prisons and Prison Discipline
- Private Bills. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Private Calendar. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Privateering
- Privilege. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Prizes, Maritime
- Production of Wealth
- Products On Paper
- Profits
- Prohibition
- Promotion
- Property
- Property, Landed . (see Rent.)
- Property, Literary
- Proportional Representation
- Protection. Restrictions Upon Freedom of Exchange
- Protection In the United States.
- Protestantism. (see Churches, Protestant.)
- Prussia
- Public Debts. (see Debts, National, State and Local.)
- Public Lands of the United States
- Public Lands, Office of
- Public Opinion
- Public Policy
- Public Revenues. (see Revenues, Public.)
- Q
- Quarantine
- Quids
- R
- Races of Mankind
- Radicalism
- Railways, History and Political Economy of
- Railways, Legislation Concerning, and Management Of, In the United States
- Railway Clearing House. (see Clearing, and Clearing Houses.)
- Randolph, John
- Rebellion
- Rebellion, the (in U. S. History)
- Reciprocity
- Recognition
- Reconstruction
- Refuge, Right of . (see Asylum.)
- Refunding of the Public Debt of the United States
- Reichsrath
- Reichstag
- Removal of Deposits. (see Deposits, Removal Of.)
- Removals From Office
- Rent
- Representation
- Representative Democracy. (see Democracy, Representative.)
- Republic.
- Republican Party
- Repudiation.
- Resignation.
- Restrictive System. (see Embargo, In U. S. History.)
- Returning Boards
- Revenue
- Revolution.
- Revolution, the
- Rhode Island
- Ricardo, David
- Riders
- Right of Inheritance. (see Inheritance.)
- Right of Petition. (see Petition, Right Of.)
- Riu Kiu.
- River and Harbor Bills. (see Internal Improvements.)
- Roads. (see Transportation, Means Of.)
- Roads and Canals. (see Internal Improvements.)
- Rohmer's Doctrine of Parties. (see Parties, Political.)
- Roman Catholic Church.
- Rotation In Office. (see Civil Service Reform.)
- Rules. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Rush, Richard
- Russia
- S
- Saint-simonism. (see Socialism.)
- Salary Grab
- San Domingo
- Sandwich Islands
- Sanitary System
- Savings
- Savings Banks. (see Banks, History and Management of Savings.)
- Saxony
- Schools. (see Education and the State)
- Schurz, Carl
- Science. (see Social Science.)
- Scotland
- Scott, Winfield
- Scratching
- Search, Right of
- Secession
- Sedition Laws. (see Alien and Sedition Laws.)
- Seminole War. (see Slavery, II.)
- Senate
- Sergeant-at-arms. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Sergeant, John
- Servia, Principality of
- Sessions of Congress. (see Congress, Sessions Of.)
- Seward, William H.
- Seymour, Horatio
- Shay's Rebellion. (see Confederation, Articles Of.)
- Sherman, John
- ShimonosÉki Indemnity
- Shinto
- Siam
- Silver
- Silver Bill. (see Hayes, R. B.)
- Sinking Fund
- Sintooism. (see Shinto)
- Slavery
- Smith, Adam
- Smuggling
- Socialism and Socialists
- Social Contract
- Social Science
- Society
- South Carolina
- Southern Confederacy. (see Confederate States.)
- Sovereignty
- Sovereignty (in U. S. History). (see Popular Sovereignty.)
- Spain
- Speaker. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Speakers. (see Congress, Sessions Of.)
- Speculation
- Spoils System
- Squatter Sovereignty. (see Popular Sovereignty)
- Stamp Act Congress
- Standing Armies. (see Armies.)
- Standing Orders. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Stanton, Edwin M .
- State, Department of
- State Rights. (see State Sovereignty, II.)
- State Sovereignty
- State, the
- States, Constitutional and Legal Diversities In
- Statistics
- Stephens, Alexander H.
- Stevens,thaddeus
- Stock Exchange Clearing House. (see Clearing, and Clearing Houses.)
- Stock Jobbing. (see Agiotage.)
- Story, Joseph
- Strict Construction. (see Construction.)
- Strikes and Lockouts
- Subsidies.
- Sub-treasury. (see Independent Treasury.)
- Suffrage
- Sumner, Charles
- Sumptuary Laws. (see Laws, Sumptuary.)
- Supply. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Supreme Court. (see Judiciary.)
- Sweden.
- Switzerland
- T
- Table. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Tammany Hall
- Taney, Roger Brooke
- Tariffs of the United States.
- Tartar, Tartary
- Ta-tsing (great Pure)
- Tauism (tao-ism, To;, Or Doctrine of Lao-tse).
- Taxation, Principles of
- Taxation, National and Local. (see Revenue, Public; Taxation.)
- Taylor, Zachary
- Telegraph
- Tellers. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Temperance Movement In the United States. (see Prohibition, Police.)
- Ten-hour Law
- Tennessee
- Term and Tenure of Office
- Territorial Waters
- Territories
- Texas
- Third Estate
- Tie. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Tilden, Samuel Jones
- Times-spirit, the . (see Zeitgeist.)
- Tompkins, Daniel D.
- Ton-kin. (see Tonquin.)
- Tonquin (tong-king Or Tun-kin).
- Transportation, Means of
- Treason
- Treasury Department.
- Treaties.
- Treaties, Fishery.
- Treaties of the United States
- Trent Affair
- Tungusic Races. (see Tartar.)
- Turkey.
- Tyler, John
- U
- Union, the (in U. S. History),
- Union Party. (see Republican Party.)
- United States Notes.
- United States Notes. Legal-tender Cases—decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States.
- United States of America
- United States of Colombia. (see New Grenada.)
- United States Pension Laws and the Pension Laws of Other Countries
- United States Surplus Money
- Universal Suffrage. (see Suffrage.)
- Universities
- Usury
- Utah
- Utility
- Utopia
- V
- Value
- Van Buren, Martin
- Vermont
- Veto
- Vice-president. (see Executive, V.; Electors, Senate; Administrations.)
- Virginia
- Virginia Resolutions. (see Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions.)
- W
- Wage Fund, the
- Wages
- "waltham System,"
- Wants.
- War. (see Declaration of War, Belligerents, Exchange of Prisoners.)
- War, the Civil. (see Rebellion, The, In U. S. History.)
- War Department.
- Wars (in U. S. History).
- Washington City. (see Capital, National.)
- Washington, George
- Washington Territory
- Ways and Means. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Wealth.
- Webster, Daniel
- Weights and Measures.
- West Virginia
- Wheeler, William A.
- Whig Party
- Whisky Insurrection
- Whisky Ring
- White, Hugh Lawson
- White League. (see Ku-klux Klan.)
- Wilmot Proviso
- Wilson, Henry
- Wirt, William
- Wisconsin
- Woman Suffrage. (see Suffrage.)
- Wright, Silas
- Wyoming
- Wyoming Territory
- X
- X Y Z Mission
- Y
- Yazoo Frauds
- Yeas and Nays. (see Parliamentary Law.)
- Z
- Zeitgeist.
- Zollverein.
- Lists of Writers
- The Following Is a List of the Subjects Treated By American Writers:
STATE
STATE, The. Although natural, and founded on what is most imperious in our sympathies and our wants, society is not maintained and preserved without an effort. The bond which holds it together would be weak indeed and forever in jeopardy if a protective power were not established superior to individual wills to keep them within bounds and to defend the persons and the rights of each against the attacks of violence. Men may wish to see the authority here referred to invested with this form or that; they may attribute to it this or that historical origin: but all agree that it is indispensable to the maintenance of human society, and that only perfectly wise or perfectly brute creatures can do without government.
—But it is clear that there is a great difference between the purely repressive authority with which the elders of a tribe are invested, and the complicated and powerful organism called the state in nations advanced in civilization. When society has reached a certain degree of development; when the cultivation of land possessed in common or appropriated by individuals requires security; when foresight inspired by offensive or defensive war has engendered the habit in a people of making certain preparations in common in view of common danger and enterprises in common; and when certain ideas, beliefs and feelings, held by all the members of a given society, have given birth to the moral unity of the nation, the nation is necessarily developed, and assumes a character of solidity, duration and permanence. It extends its sphere of action, and is completed by the addition and regular working of numerous wheels, each having a distinct existence, and all functioning in harmony. The living personification of the fatherland, the instrument of its strength at home and abroad, the author and enforcer of the law, the supreme arbiter of interests, judge of peace and war, the protector of the weak, the representative of all that is general in the wants of society, the organ of the common reason and of the collective force of society: such is the state in all its power and majesty. Superior to all it governs, the state nevertheless owes to its own citizens all that it is. But it is absolutely necessary that we should remark: what society has confided to the guardianship of the state as a precious deposit depends no more upon society than it does upon the state—the sacred deposit of justice. (See JUSTICE.) Justice does not emanate from the individuals who compose society; it imposes itself on them as their rule of action. In vain do certain publicists maintain that the state can do everything because it is above everything. Nothing is more destitute of foundation than such an assertion. Its rights would be limited by its duties even if they were not limited by positive guarantees written in the laws. The state, too, has a rule and bridle in justice. The law emanates from the state. But the power to make the law and to employ force in its service, does not imply that the state has the unlimited power to make what is unjust just, or the just unjust, at its pleasure. Human beings are subject to moral laws, against which the state has no more power than it has against the physical laws which govern matter.—(See NATION, CHECKS AND BALANCES, GOVERNMENT, GOVERNMENTAL INTERFERENCE, LEGISLATION, REPRESENTATION.)
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