Source gallica.bnf.fr / Bibliothèque nationale de France Lectures on jurisprude
Source gallica.bnf.fr / Bibliothèque nationale de France Lectures on jurisprudence, or The philosophy of positive law (5e éd. rev.) / by the late John Austin,... ; 5th ed., rev. [...] Austin, John (1790-1859). Auteur du texte. Lectures on jurisprudence, or The philosophy of positive law (5e éd. rev.) / by the late John Austin,... ; 5th ed., rev. and ed. by Robert Campbell,.... 1885. 1/ Les contenus accessibles sur le site Gallica sont pour la plupart des reproductions numériques d'oeuvres tombées dans le domaine public provenant des collections de la BnF. Leur réutilisation s'inscrit dans le cadre de la loi n°78-753 du 17 juillet 1978 : - La réutilisation non commerciale de ces contenus est libre et gratuite dans le respect de la législation en vigueur et notamment du maintien de la mention de source. - La réutilisation commerciale de ces contenus est payante et fait l'objet d'une licence. 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Lectures on Jurisprudence, or the philosophy of positive law 8° F 8085 I.OlUloi) 1885 Austin, John ~y ~e-: _`r yt~ a~ AUSTIN os JURISPRUDENCE VOL.I. /liâJtï LECTURES ox JURISPRUDENCE OB THE PHILOSOPHY OF POSITIVE LAW By THE LATE JOHN AUSTIN or rai unn TEMne, BAHmsTenfliflW1"™ FIFTH EDITION, REVISED AND EDITED By ROBERT CAMPBELL AOVOCiTE («.OICH B*B), A.VD OF UXCOI_V'am, »*ltR|srEIt.«-lAW IX TWO VOUS– VOL. I. LOXDOX JOHN ilUEKAY, ALBEMABLE STBEET 1885 Tht right o/tmtutati<m ii rutnvl. PritltJtr R. & R. Ct-AMt,Eilinburfh. ADVEBTISEMENT TO THIS EDITION. It must be gratifying to ail who value and appreciate the workof the late JOHN AUSTIN to know that a new edition of these Lectures has been urgently called for. The cir- cumstanceis significant not only as a publie recognition of the merit of the lectures themselves, but also as a proof of the growing interest which is becoming awakened in this country towards the philosophical study of juris- prudence. The presentedition has been prepared with the assist- ance of notes of the original lectures which have been preserved by Mr. J. S. Mill, and were kindly furnished by him to the late Mrs. Austin for the purpose of a new edition which she meditated, but did not live to com- plete. These notes have now been collated with the lectures as alreadypublished, and are found so accuratc and full in the parts where the printed lectures are com- plete that they may be confidently relied on for supplying thé lacun» which, owing to the state of the author's IIS., were in the foimer publication inevitable. In revising the six lectures which formed the volume published in the author's lifetime, care has been taken to make no material alteration except in accordance with a clcnrly expressed intention of the author contained in his memoranda preserved by the late editor, and published in the notes to. tlie former édition. Whete, however, such intention was cienr upon the face of that text and notes, the présent editor has chosen rather to venturo on the attempt to embody it explicitly in the text, than to lcave the task to eaeh reader of collecting tlutt inten- tion from the scattered passages and fragments. In tho instances, confined to thé matter of a few pages, where any such altération has been made, the nature und extent of the alteration is explicitly stated in thé foot-notes by the present editor, distinguished by the initiais R. C7 With regard to the remaining Lwrtures, free use has been made of the notes above described(hereaftershortly referred to as 'J. S. M.'s notes '), both for purposes of arrangementand addition. For the purpose of arrange- ment, these notes hâve often furnished the due wherc, for want of such a due, inévitable mispluc«ment of pas- sages had taken place in the former edition. Of the additions the most important are in the 39th and 40th lectures. The latter part of the 39th lecture, on the important topie of Codification/fornied au entire lecture in the course presei-ved in J. S. M.'s notes. The 40th lecture, which is described in the former édition as miss- ing, is now restored, and forms the leading chapter of one of the author's main divisionsof his subject. Neglect could not have efl'aced the impress whieh John Austin and his work has stamped upon the thought of posterity. But that so much lias been recorded iu explieit and substuntive form, is due tu the ability and diligence of tlie lady whose preface heuds the following pages. Mrs. died at Weybridge on thé 8th of August 186", and it may be interesting to tlie reader, and can scanely be inappropriate hère, to supplément the ensuing prefac. with a short account of lier uwn lifu. In doing so the editor takes the liberty of borrowing from the pen of one entitled to speak from long and iutiiuato aequaintanee. The Times of the 12th August 1867 con- tains thé followiug notice It 1ms already been announced, in nnother part of these eolunms, that Mrs. Austin, widow of tho late John Austin, well known as one of thé most eminent professors of the science of jurisprudence whom this country lias produced, expired on the 8th inst. at lier résidence at Weybridge,after an acute attack of a uitiliidy of the heurt, with which she had long bewi afllicted. Althougli the life of Mrs. Austiu was spcnt in thé active dis- chargc of lier privnte duties, aud nlthough no one was less dis- posed to court celebrity, winch she might have enjoyed iu a far larger d^rcu had she cared to seek it, she xmdoubtedly filled so considérablea place in Society aud in literature that some record of so remarkabJt: a woman may not uiifitly appear iu this place. To the attractions of great personal ljeauty in early life, and of a grâce of manner undinihiislied hy years, Mrs. Austin added a masculine intellect and a large heart. It was not by the play of a vivid imagination, or by au habituai displny of what is termed vit, that she secured the affections and thé friendship of so many of thé wisest and noblest of her eontemporarif.s. The power she excreised in society was due to the sterling qualities of her judgment, her knowled«e, her literary style which was one of great pvivity and excellence and, abovo ail. to her cordial reudiness to proniote ail good objects, to maintain higli principles of action, and to confer heuefits on ail who claimed her aid. Mrs. Austin was descended from the Taylors of Xorwich, a family whieh lias in several générations produced men and womeu distiujiuished by literary and identifie ability. She was born in 1793, and she reeeived in her father's house an éducation of more than comnion range. In 1820 she married Sir. John Austin, then a barrister on the Xorfolk Circuit, and came to réside next door to Mr. Beuthani and Mr. James Mill, in Qucon Square, "Westminster. Althou»h that house could boast of nono of the attractions of luxury, for the fortune of its owners was extrenicly small, it soon collected within its walls as rcmarkablc an assemblage of persons as ever met m a London drawirig-room. There nii«ht be seeu dint and flitting figure of thu past Mr. Bentham and his two disciples, James and John Stuart Mill, the Grotes, the rising lawyers of that day whose success lias justified the promise of their dawn, Bicker- steth, Erle, Itomilly, and Senior and ail this wisdom and learn- uploads/Geographie/ john-austin-lectures-on-jurisprudence-or-the-philosophy-of-positive-law-pdf.pdf
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- Publié le Oct 03, 2021
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- Langue French
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