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论政府原理
  • (英)萨尔兹伯利的约翰著 著
  • 出版社: 北京:中国政法大学出版社
  • ISBN:7562023972
  • 出版时间:2003
  • 标注页数:241页
  • 文件大小:9MB
  • 文件页数:271页
  • 主题词:政治思想史-英国-中世纪-英文

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图书目录

Prologue3

BOOK Ⅰ9

Chapter 1 What most harms the fortunate9

Chapter 2 In what consists devotion to unsuitable goals10

Chapter 3 The distribution of duties according to the political constitution of the ancients10

BOOK Ⅲ13

Prologue13

Chapter 1 Of the universal and public welfare14

Chapter 3 That pride is the root of all evil and passionate desire a general leprosy which infects all17

Chapter 4 The flatterer,the toady and the cajoler,than whom none is more pernicious18

Chapter 6 The multiplication of flatterers is beyond number and pushes out of distinguished houses those who are honourable19

Chapter 10 That the Romans are dedicated to vanity and what the ends of flatterers are22

Chapter 15 That it is only permitted to flatter him who it is permitted to slay;and that the tyrant is a public enemy25

BOOK Ⅳ27

Prologue27

Chapter 1 On the difference between the prince and the tyrant,and what the prince is28

Chapter 2 What law is;and that the prince,although he is an absolutely binding law unto him-self,still is the servant of law and equity,the bearer of the public persona,and sheds blood blamelessly30

Chapter 3 That the prince is a minister of priests and their inferior;and what it is for rulers to perform their ministry faithfully32

Chapter 4 That the authority of divine law consists in the prince being subject to the justice of law35

Chapter 5 That the prince must be chaste and shun avarice38

Chapter 6 That the ruler must have the law of God always before his mind and eyes,and he is to be proficient in letters,and he is to receive counsel from men of letters41

Chapter 7 That the fear of God should be taught,and humility should exist,and this humility should be protected so that the authority of the prince is not diminished;and that some precepts are flexible,others inflexible46

Chapter 8 Of the moderation of the prince's justice and mercy,which should be temperately mixed for the utility of the republic49

Chapter 9 What it is to stray to the right or to the left,which is forbidden to the prince53

Chapter 10 What utility princes may acquire from the cultivation of justice54

Chapter 11 What are the other rewards of princes56

Chapter 12 By what cause rulership and kingdoms are transferred61

Prologue65

Chapter 1 Plutarch's letter instructing Trajan65

BOOK Ⅴ65

Chapter 2 According to Plutarch,what a republic is and what place is held in it by the soul of the members66

Chapter 3 What is principally directed by Plutarch's plan...68

Chapter 6 Of the prince,who is the head of the republic,and his election,and privileges,and the rewards of virtue and sin;and that blessed Job should be imitated;and of the virtues of blessed Job69

Chapter 7 What bad and good happen to subjects on account of the morals of princes;and that the examples of some stratagems streng-then this75

Chapter 8 Why Trajan seems to be preferable to all others79

Chapter 9 Of those who hold the place of the heart,and that the iniquitous are prevented from counselling the powerful,and of the fear of God,and wisdom,and philosophy81

Chapter 10 Of the flanks of the powerful,whose needs are to be satisfied and whose malice is to be restrained85

Chapter 11 Of the eyes,ears and tongue of the powerful,and of the duties of governing,and that judges ought to have a know-ledge of right and equity,91

a good will and the power of execution,and that they should be bound by oath to the laws and should be distanced from the taint of presents91

Chapter 15 What pertains to the sacred calling of proconsuls,governors and ordinary justi-ces,and to what extent it is permitted to reach out for gifts;and of Cicero,Bernard,Martin and Geoffrey of Chartres95

Chapter 17 Money is condemned in favour of wisdom;this is also approved by the examples of the ancient philosophers99

BOOK Ⅵ103

Prologue103

Chapter 1 That the hand of the republic is either armed or unarmed;and which one is unarmed,and regarding its duties104

Chapter 2 That military service requires selection,knowledge and practice109

Chapter 6 What ills arise from disregard by our countrymen for the selection of soldiers,and how Harold tamed the Welsh112

Chapter 7 What is the formula of the oath of the soldier,and that no one is permitted to serve in the army without it114

Chapter 8 The armed soldier is by necessity bound to religion,in just the way that the clergy is consecrated in obedience to God;and that just as the title of soldier is one of labour,so it is one of honour115

Chapter 9 That faith is owed to God in preference to any man whomsoever,and man is not served unless God is served117

Chapter 18 The examples of recent history,and how King Henry the Second quelled the dis-turbances and violence under King Stephen and pacified the island118

Chapter 19 Of the honour to be exhibited by soldiers,and of the modesty to be shown;and who are the transmitters of the military arts,and of certain of their general precepts122

Chapter 20 Who are the feet of the republic and regarding the care devoted to them125

Chapter 21 The republic is arranged according to its resemblance to nature,and its arrange-ment is derived from the bees127

Chapter 22 That without prudence and forethought no magistracy remains intact,nor does that republic flourish the head of which is impaired129

Chapter 24 The vices of the powerful are to be tolerated because with them rests the prospect of public safety,131

and because they are the dispensers of safety just as the stomach in the body of animals dis-penses nourishment,and this is by the judgment of the Lord Adrian131

Chapter 25 Of the coherence of the head and the members of the republic;and that the prince is a sort of image of the deity,and of the crime of high treason and of that which is to be kept in fidelity137

Chapter 26 That vices are to be endured or removed and are distinguished from flagrant crimes;and certain general matters about the office of the prince;and a brief epi-logue on how much reverence is to be displayed towards him139

Chapter 29 That the people are moulded by the merits of the prince and the government is moulded by the merits of the people,and every creature is subdued and serves man at God's pleasure142

BOOK Ⅶ145

Prologue145

Chapter 1 That the Academics are more modest than other philosophers whose rashness blinds them so that they are given to false beliefs148

Chapter 2 Of the errors of the Academics;and who among them it is permitted to imitate;and those matters which are doubtful to the wise man150

Chapter 7 That some things are demonstrated by the authority of the senses,others by reason,others by religion;and that faith in any doctrine is justified by some stable basis that need not be demonstrated;153

and that some things are known by the learned themselves,others by the uncultivated;and to what extent there is to be doubt;and that stubbornness most often impedes the examination of truth153

Chapter 8 That virtue is the unique path to being a philosopher and to advancing towards hap-piness;and of the three degrees of aspirants and of the three schools of philosophers156

Chapter 11 What it is to be a true philosopher;and the end towards which all writings are directed in their aim160

Chapter 17 Of ambition,and that passion accompanies foolishness;and what is the origin of tyranny;and of the diverse paths of the ambitious162

Chapter 21 Of hypocrites who endeavour to conceal the disgrace of ambition under the false pretext of religion167

Chapter 25 Of the love and acclaim of liberty;and of those ancestors who endured patiently free speaking of the mind;and of the dif-ference between an offence and a taunt175

Prologue181

BOOK Ⅷ181

Chapter 12 That some long to be modelled after beasts and insensate creatures;and how much humanity is to be afforded to slaves;and of the pleasures of three senses182

Chapter 16 Of the four rivers which spring for Epi-cureans from the fount of lustfulness and which create a deluge by which the world is nearly submerged;and of the opposite waters and the garments of Esau188

Chapter 17 In what way the tyrant differs from the prince;and of the tyranny of priests;and in what way a shepherd,a thief and an employee differ from one another190

Chapter 18 Tyrants are the ministers of God;and what a tyrant is;and of the moral charac-ters of Gaius Caligula and his nephew Nero and each of their ends201

Chapter 20 That by the authority of the divine book it is lawful and glorious to kill public tyrants,so long as the murderer is not obligated to the tyrant by fealty nor otherwise lets justice or honour slip206

Chapter 21 All tyrants reach a miserable end;and that God exercises punishment against them if the human hand refrains,and this is evident from Julian the Apostate and many examples in sacred scripture210

Chapter 22 Of Gideon,the model for rulers,and Antiochus213

Chapter 23 The counsel of Brutus is to be used against those who not only fight but battle schismatically for the supreme pontificate;and that nothing is calm for tyrants216

Chapter 25 What is the most faithful path to be fol-lowed towards what the Epicureans desire and promise225

Index233

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