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This Liberty Fund publication of Philosophiae Moralis Institutio Compendiaria is a parallel edition of the English and Latin versions of a book designed by Hutcheson for use in the classroom. General Editor Knud Haakonssen remarks that “Hutcheson’s Institutio was written as a textbook for university students and it therefore covers a curriculum which has an institutional background in his own university, Glasgow. This was a curriculum crucially influenced by Hutcheson’s predecessor Gershom Carmichael, and at its center was modern natural jurisprudence as systematized by Grotius, Pufendorf, and others. . . . The Institutio is the first major [published] attempt by Hutcheson to deal with natural law on his own terms. . . . It therefore encapsulates the axis of natural law and Scottish Enlightenment ideas, which so many other thinkers, including Adam Smith, worked with in their different ways. It is of great significance that this work issued from the class in which Smith sat as a student.” Editor Luigi Turco comments that “the aim of the text was twofold: on one hand, to put forward an optimistic view of God, human nature, and the harmony of the universe; on the other hand, to provide students with the knowledge of natural and civil law required by the university curriculum. Hutcheson starts from Pufendorf’s De officio hominis et civis (itself an abridgment of his De jure naturae et gentium)—the text that was most widely read within Protestant universities—but modifies its moral foundations.”Francis Hutcheson was a crucial link between the continental European natural law tradition and the emerging Scottish Enlightenment. Hence, he is a pivotal figure in the Natural Law and Enlightenment Classics series. A contemporary of Lord Kames and George Turnbull, an acquaintance of David Hume, and the teacher of Adam Smith, Hutcheson was arguably the leading figure in making Scotland distinctive within the general European Enlightenment.Luigi Turco is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Bologna.Knud Haakonssen is Professor of Intellectual History and Director of the Centre for Intellectual History at the University of Sussex, England.

Table of Contents

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  1. Title Page, Copyright
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  1. Table of Contents
  2. pp. vii-viii
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  1. Introduction
  2. pp. ix-xxiii
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. p. xxiv
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  1. Abbreviations
  2. pp. xxv-xxvi
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  1. General Note
  2. pp. xxvii-xxviii
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  1. Original Title Page
  2. pp. xxix-xxx
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  1. Advertisement by the Translator
  2. p. 2
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  1. To the Students in Universities
  2. pp. 3-6
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  1. Librorum et Capitum Argumenta
  2. p. 7
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  1. The Contents of the Several Books and Chapters
  2. pp. 7-22
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  1. Book I
  1. Chapter I. Of Human Nature and Its Parts
  2. pp. 23-51
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  1. Chapter II. Concerning the Supreme Good
  2. pp. 52-67
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  1. Chapter III. Concerning the Chief Divisions of Virtue
  2. pp. 68-75
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  1. Chapter IV. Our Duties toward God
  2. pp. 76-80
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  1. Chapter V. Our Duties toward Mankind
  2. pp. 81-86
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  1. Chapter VI. Concerning our Duties toward Ourselves, and the Improvement of the Mind
  2. pp. 87-96
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  1. Chapter VII. Some Practical Considerations to Excite and Preserve the Study of Virtue
  2. pp. 97-102
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  1. Book II
  1. Chapter I. Of the Law of Nature
  2. pp. 103-109
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  1. Chapter II. Of the Nature of Rights, and Their Several Divisions
  2. pp. 110-115
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  1. Chapter III. Concerning the Various Degrees of Virtue and Vice, and the Circumstances on which They Depend
  2. pp. 116-126
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  1. Chapter IV. Concerning the Natural Rights of Individuals,
  2. pp. 127-132
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  1. Chapter V. Of Real Adventitious Rights and Property
  2. pp. 133-136
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  1. Chapter VI. The Methods of Acquiring Property
  2. pp. 137-144
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  1. Chapter VII. Of Derived Property
  2. pp. 145-150
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  1. Chapter VIII. The Methods of Transferring Property, Contracts, Succession, Testaments
  2. pp. 151-154
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  1. Chapter IX. Of Contracts in General
  2. pp. 155-168
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  1. Chapter X. Our Obligations in Speech
  2. pp. 169-174
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  1. Chapter XI. Of Oaths and Vows
  2. pp. 175-179
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  1. Chapter XII. Concerning the Values or Prices of Goods
  2. pp. 180-183
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  1. Chapter XIII. Of the Several Sorts of Contracts
  2. pp. 184-191
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  1. Chapter XIV. Obligations Resembling those from Contracts
  2. pp. 192-195
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  1. Chapter XV. Of Rights Arising from Damage Done, and the Rights of War
  2. pp. 196-205
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  1. Chapter XVI. Extraordinary Rights in Cases of Necessity, and the Common Rights of Mankind
  2. pp. 206-211
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  1. Chapter XVII. How Rights and Obligations Cease: How Controversies are to be Decided in Natural Liberty: and the Rule of Interpretation
  2. pp. 212-216
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  1. Book III
  1. Chapter I. Concerning Marriage
  2. pp. 217-225
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  1. Chapter II. The Duties of Parents and Children
  2. pp. 226-229
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  1. Chapter III. The Rights of Masters and Servants
  2. pp. 230-234
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  1. Chapter IV. The Original of Civil Government
  2. pp. 235-239
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  1. Chapter V. The Internal Structure of States: and the Several Parts of Supreme Power
  2. pp. 240-245
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  1. Chapter VI. Of the Various Plans of Government,
  2. pp. 246-253
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  1. Chapter VII. The Rights of the Supreme Power: and the Methods of Acquiring it
  2. pp. 254-265
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  1. Chapter VIII. Of Civil Laws and their Execution
  2. pp. 266-276
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  1. Chapter IX. The Laws of War
  2. pp. 277-283
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  1. Chapter X. Of Treaties and Ambassadors, and the Entire Dissolution of States
  2. pp. 284-290
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  1. Bibliography of Ancient Literature Referred to by Hutcheson
  2. pp. 291-292
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  1. Bibliography of Modern Literature
  2. pp. 293-296
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 297-312
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  1. Publication Information
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