natural law

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الإنجليزية - التركية
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الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
An ethical theory that posits the existence of a law whose content is set by nature and that therefore has validity everywhere
The body of law derived by human reason from nature and binding on human society
a rule or body of rules of conduct inherent in human nature and essential to or binding upon human society
The most fundamental principles of scientific knowledge It is a system of rules and principles that is accepted by almost everyone as true It has been tested over and over, applied to many situations, and still is found to be true
The theory of ethics that holds that individual moral standards are derived from a higher, universal source
Those laws created (or enacted) at the beginning of time (before the seventh day) by an all wise creator for the purpose of governing the physical universe Examples of natural law include the law of gravity, the law of entropy, the law of conservation of matter and energy, the law of relativity
God, or nature, or universal reason has given humanity a law from which the norms of all human law must be derived The role of human beings is to simply deduce natural law correctly There is very little agreement on the definition of "right reason," however
the law of the Light which states: 1 Believe in yourself and make positive commitments 2 Love yourself completely and remove all negativity from your body 3 Keep your chakras closed 4 Refuse all negativity and return it to its source 5 Don't break anyone's free will or let them break yours 6 Take responsibility for your own life 7 Fight spiritually with the Light to help your spirit progress
a pattern of necessary and universal regularity; a universal moral imperative, a description of what ought to happen in all human relationships
The idea that not only is nature governed by laws, but that nature has written in the hearts of human beings the laws by which they should govern their lives In other words, we can know without the help of the Bible the difference between right and wrong Natural law is conceived to be the foundation on which positive law, the specific laws of individual groups, tribes, nations, is built It is considered a universal law and is still an operative concept, though the term itself may not be used The notion of natural law is almost universally rejected by modern social science Nevertheless, the Nurenburg war-crimes trials after World War II, for instance, had no foundation in written laws, and were based on the assumption of natural laws binding all human beings; the present insistence on human rights also implies the affirmation of a kind of natural law
A sequence of events in nature that has been observed to occur without variation under the same conditions Natural law is the basis of the experimental method in science, and is dependent upon cause and effect Necromancy - (1 ) The art or practice of magically revealing the future, of ally attaining other purposes esp through communication with and the intervention of the dead (2 ) The art or practice of magically conjuring up the souls of the dead Need, The - The purpose of a Spell or Ritual; a vacuum or unhappy condition in the practitioner's life The need may be love, health, peace, the banishment of harmful habits or thoughts, or one of many other changes
A law or body of laws that derives from nature and is believed to be binding upon human actions apart from or in conjunction with laws established by human authority. In jurisprudence and political philosophy, a system of right or justice common to all humankind and derived from nature rather than from the rules of society, or positive law. The concept can be traced to Aristotle, who held that what was "just by nature" was not always the same as what was "just by law." In one form or another, the existence of natural law was asserted by the Stoics (see Stoicism), Cicero, the Roman jurists, St. Paul, St. Augustine, Gratian, St. Thomas Aquinas, John Duns Scotus, William of Ockham, and Francisco Suárez. In the modern period, Hugo Grotius insisted on the validity of natural law even on the assumption that God does not exist, and Thomas Hobbes defined a law of nature as "a precept of general rule found out by reason, by which a man is forbidden to do that which is destructive of his life." Hobbes attempted to construct an edifice of law by rational deduction from a hypothetical "state of nature" and a social contract of consent between rulers and subjects. John Locke departed from Hobbes in describing the state of nature as an early society in which free and equal men observe the natural law. Jean-Jacques Rousseau postulated a savage who was virtuous in isolation and actuated by two principles "prior to reason": self-preservation and compassion. The authors of the U.S. Declaration of Independence refer only briefly to "the Laws of Nature" before citing equality and other "unalienable" rights as "self-evident." The French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen asserts liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression as "imprescriptible natural rights." Interest in the concept of natural law declined dramatically in the 19th century, partly as a result of skeptical attacks by Jeremy Bentham and other proponents of utilitarianism; it was revived in the mid-20th century in light of the crimes committed by the Nazi regime during World War II. Skepticism of natural law and natural rights remained strong, however, and later writers almost invariably talked of human rights rather than natural rights
1 Law that so necessarily agrees with the nature of human beings, that without observing the maxims, the peace and happiness of society cannot be preserved; that law, knowledge of which may be attained merely by the light of reason, and from the facts of its essential connection with human nature
In Hobbes's philosophy, a value-neutral principle, discovered by reason, of how best to preserve one's life In Thomas Aquinas's philosophy, God's eternal law as it applies to humans on earth and dictates the fundamental principles of morality
principles based on reason nature or religion
natural law

    الواصلة

    na·tu·ral law

    التركية النطق

    näçrıl lô

    النطق

    /ˈnaʧrəl ˈlô/ /ˈnæʧrəl ˈlɔː/
المفضلات