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Topic: Imputation (law)


  
  BRIGHT, JOHN (1811-188g) - Online Information article about BRIGHT, JOHN (1811-188g)
law at Rochdale in 1802, going into business for himself seven years later.
In the Anti-Corn Law movement the two speakers were the complements and- correlatives of each other.
repeal of the Corn Laws, and at a meeting in Manchester on 2nd July 1846 Cobden moved and Bright seconded a motion dissolving the league.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /BOS_BRI/BRIGHT_JOHN_1811_188g_.html   (4261 words)

  
 William of Ockham [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
The legal conception of the Church finds expression here; he who wishes to belong to it must subject himself to its laws, whether or not he is personally convinced of their justice.
The relation of pope and emperor is discussed not only from the standpoint of the historic civil law, but from that of natural law as well.
The idea of natural law had come down from the ancients to both canonists and civilians, as a criterion of the justice of positive enactments; the popes had employed it often enough against civil rulers, and now it was turned against themselves.
www.iep.utm.edu /o/ockham.htm   (3433 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Calvinism
All these statements Calvin rejected as Pelagian, except that he would maintain, though unable to justify, the- imputation of the sinner's lapse to human nature by itself.
The sinner commits actions which the saint may also indulge in; but one is saved the other is lost; and so the entire moral contents of Christianity are emptied out.
Augustine says that the Law is Christ; Luther denies and Augustine maintains that obedience is a matter of conscience.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/03198a.htm   (5893 words)

  
 He Lives
Jesus himself expresses the highest view of Scripture, saying that “not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen” in the law shall disappear or fail to be accomplished.
The laws of physics are precariously balanced, and were the value of one constant slightly different, life as we know it wouldn't exist.
The underlying rationale for this argument involves the "landscape" of potential laws of physics (which, it turns out, aren't so immutable after all), a whole bunch of extra dimensions and lots of particle physics.
helives.blogspot.com   (12259 words)

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