登陆注册
26567200000028

第28章

The assumption that Natural Law is binding on states inter seis the next in rank of those which underlie International Law. Aseries of assertions or admissions of this principle may betraced up to the very infancy of modern juridical science, and atfirst sight it seems a direct inference from the teaching of theRomans. The civil condition of society being distinguished fromthe natural by the fact that in the first there is a distinctauthor of law, while in the last there is none, it appears as ifthe moment a number of units were acknowledged to obey no commonsovereign or political superior they were thrown back on theulterior behests of the Law Natural. States are such units; thehypothesis of their independence excludes the notion of a commonlawgiver, and draws with it, therefore, according to a certainrange of ideas, the notion of subjection to the primeval order ofnature. The alternative is to consider independent communities asnot related to each other by any law, but this condition oflawlessness is exactly the vacuum which the Nature of thejurisconsults abhorred. There is certainly apparent reason forthinking that if the mind of a Roman lawyer rested on any spherefrom which civil law was banished, it would instantly fill thevoid with the ordinances of Nature. It is never safe, however, toassume that conclusions, however certain and immediate in our owneyes, were actually drawn at any period of history. No passagehas ever been adduced from the remains of Roman law which, in myjudgment, proves the jurisconsults to have believed natural lawto have obligatory force between independent commonwealths; andwe cannot but see that to citizens of the Roman empire whoregarded their sovereign's dominions as conterminous withcivilisation, the equal subjection of states to the Law ofNature, if contemplated at all, must have seemed at most anextreme result of curious speculation. The truth appears to bethat modern International Law, undoubted as is its descent fromRoman law, is only connected with it by an irregular filiation.

The early modern interpreters of the jurisprudence of Rome,misconceiving the meaning of Jus Gentium, assumed withouthesitation that the Romans had bequeathed to them a system ofrules for the adjustment of international transactions. This "Lawof Nations" was at first an authority which had formidablecompetitors to strive with, and the condition of Europe was longsuch as to preclude its universal reception. Gradually, however,the western world arranged itself in a form more favourable tothe theory of the civilians; circumstances destroyed the creditof rival doctrines; and at last, at a peculiarly felicitousconjuncture, Ayala and Grotius were able to obtain for it theenthusiastic assent of Europe, an assent which has been over andover again renewed in every variety of solemn engagement. Thegreat men to whom its triumph is chiefly owing attempted, it needscarcely be said, to place it on an entirely new basis, and it isunquestionable that in the course of this displacement theyaltered much of its structure, though far less of it than iscommonly supposed. Having adopted from the Antonine jurisconsultsthe position that the Jus Gentium and the Jus Naturae wereidentical, Grotius, with his immediate predecessors and hisimmediate successors, attributed to the Law of Nature anauthority which would never perhaps have been claimed for it, if"Law of Nations" had not in that age been an ambiguousexpression. They laid down unreservedly that Natural Law is thecode of states, and thus put in operation a process which hascontinued almost down to our own day, the process of engraftingon the international system rules which are supposed to have beenevolved from the unassisted contemplation of the conception ofNature. There is too one consequence of immense practicalimportance to mankind which, though not unknown during the earlymodern history of Europe, was never clearly or universallyacknowledged till the doctrines of the Grotian school hadprevailed. If the society of nations is governed by Natural Law,the atoms which compose it must be absolutely equal. Men underthe sceptre of Nature are all equal, and accordinglycommonwealths are equal if the international state be one ofnature. The proposition that independent communities, howeverdifferent in size and power, are all equal in the view of the lawof nations, has largely contributed to the happiness of mankind,though it is constantly threatened by the political tendencies ofeach successive age. It is a doctrine which probably would neverhave obtained a secure footing at all if international Law hadnot been entirely derived from the majestic claims of Nature bythe Publicists who wrote after the revival of letters.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 沉明破晓

    沉明破晓

    这是与人类世界所平行的世界,2014年,爆发了一场“异样”的生化危机······
  • 绝域剑怒

    绝域剑怒

    意外的意外留下难以磨灭的伤痛,岁月的磨砺谱写人生的篇章,浴血于天地之间叱咤于九天之上,披浪执枪斩杀阻我强敌,爱恨情仇书写铁血战歌,一身热血终不改,驰骋九霄傲天涯………看方辰一路走来……
  • 爱难言

    爱难言

    明朗的早晨,男孩匆忙去教室,不经意间撞到了一个女孩,衣着朴素的女孩,男孩眼中闪出欣喜的光芒,身份悬殊的两个人,能否结成连理,敬请期待。
  • 心痛的爱

    心痛的爱

    内容简介:淮要则要当名星,江真儿默默的为他加油帮他成功。。。。作者的感叹:初来北方不知雪,只了南方满是春;江上处处雪花舞,情化雪花满江飞;何故情爱冷似水,何其故?江雪寒!
  • 武战神魔

    武战神魔

    一个军队的英雄因为一件神器来到了地府在经过一番际遇之后在一个叫做神魔大陆的地方重生了(新手,学生党可能偶尔会断更)
  • 卫辉府的传说

    卫辉府的传说

    朱翊镠明朝隆庆皇帝朱载垕之子,万历皇帝朱翊钧的同母弟,生于1568年,四岁即册封为潞王,1589年就藩卫辉府至死。这个昏王藩居卫辉几十年里,凭借自己的特殊地位,仗势豪夺、野蛮盘剥,兼并土地四万余顷,遍布九府二十多县。他勾结地方官府横行乡里,肆无忌惮地欺男霸女、杀人害命,给黎民百姓造成了数不清的苦难灾祸。潞王陵中,断碑残竭记满了潞王的污德秽行;殿宇楼台浸透了百姓的辛酸血泪;衰草荒冢、枯骨干骸,昔日的封建王侯早已腐臭于历史的垃圾堆;斗转星移、岁月流逝,永存于人民心中的是善恶爱憎。至今,卫辉流传着多少委婉凄凉、悲壮惨烈的民间传说。
  • 独尊天下

    独尊天下

    修士之路,逆天而行,练己身、破生死、掌轮回,方能证道不朽!少年林叶,魂穿九州,得神秘玉蝶,修无上宝术,繁华盛景,谁主一世浮沉。
  • 古代兵勇

    古代兵勇

    中国文化知识读本丛书是由吉林文史出版社和吉林出版集团有限责任公司组织国内知名专家学者编写的一套旨在传播中华五千年优秀传统文化,提高全民文化修养的大型知识读本。
  • 帝王之武修都市

    帝王之武修都市

    一个纵横商界的奇葩人物,意外邂逅一块奇异石头,从此攻城略地崔营拔寨,钱财滚滚美女缠身,成就都市逍遥帝王!
  • 傲娇小娘子

    傲娇小娘子

    凤贤好不容易让爹爹同意了她跟容呆子的婚事,眼见婚期将近,怎么突然冒出陌生人让呆子进京。而且呆子好像有事情瞒着她好吧,他可能是有苦衷,她就先相信他。可是,进京?刺杀?当皇帝???这些又是怎么回事?完全就没把她放在心上嘛,都瞒着她。她要跟他冷战。但是看着这呆子以为自己受伤落下的男儿泪,她心一揪,果断心软了。难道她真的就栽在这个呆子身上了?