INDEX
A
- Absolutism; of Hobbes, 43, 44;
- of Schopenhauer, 43;
- according to Kant, 43, 44, 125-128;
- to Locke, 44.
- Alexander I. of Russia; 80.
- Alexander the Great; 31, 103.
- Alsace-Lorraine; annexation of, 90, 92, 95.
- Amphictyonic League; 16, 22.
- Aquinas, Thomas; on fighting clergy, 18;
- Arbitration; as a substitute for war, 79, 81, 87;
- difficulties settled by, 80;
- where it is useless, 82, 83, 86.
- Aristotle; on war, 7, 8;
- and rights of an enemy, ib., 31;
- on the relation between politics and ethics, 162.
- Assyrians; war among the, 9.
B
- Balance of power; 26, 95.
C
- Cicero; on the conduct of war, 22, 41.
- Clement of Alexandria; 15.
- Clergy, fighting; Origen on, 14, 15;
- Wycliffe, 18;
- Erasmus, ib.;
- Aquinas, ib.
- Crusades, wars of the; 16, 103.
D
- Dante, Alighieri; on mediation, 46;
- on universal monarchy, 68, 69.
- Disarmament; 88-93;
- Czar’s proposal of, 90;
- practicability of, 90-93.
E
- Empire; of Rome, 9, 20, 68;
- world-, spiritual, 23, 32, 69;
- of Alexander the Great, 31, 68;
- Frankish, 69;
- Holy Roman 69;
- of Napoleon I., 69.
- Erasmus, Desiderius; and European peace, 17;
- on war, 18, 19;
- on fighting clergy, 18, 32.
F
- Frederick the Great; 66, 126.
G
- Gentilis, Albericus; 21, 32.
- Government; origin of, according to Plato, 5;
- according to Hume, 5, 52;
- to Cowper, 5, 6;
- to Hobbes, 40-42, 118, 119;
- to Kant, 51-54, 152-154;
- to Rousseau, 52;
- to Locke, 53;
- representative, 65-68, 120, 121, 124-128.
- Greeks; their attitude to other nations, 7;
- to an enemy, ib.;
- their Sacred Wars, 16;
- the Amphictyonic League, 16.
- Grotius, Hugo; his De Jure Belli et Pacis, 24-27;
- and the Jus Gentium, 24, 25;
- and the Law of Nature, 25;
- on peace, 27, 32, 40, 131.
H
- Hague Conference (1899); 86, 90.
- Hobbes, Thomas; his theory of the state of nature and origin of government, 4, 40-42, 51, 118, 119, 133; 6, 26, 27, 28, 37;
- his influence on Kant, 40, 46;
- his views on revolution, 41, 188;
- of the relations between states, 43-46, 128, 131;
- on the conduct of war, 45, 89, 120, 124, 159.
- Hooker, Richard; 52;
- on the depravity of man, 173.
- Hume, David; on the origin of government, 5, 52;
- on the state of nature, 40, 41;
- on the original contract, 52, 108, 109, 162.
I
- International Law; the development of, 20-24;
- its connection with the Reformation, 21, 24;
- in Greece and Rome, 22, 23.
J
- Jews; war among the, 9-11;
- their dream of peace, 32.
K
- Kant, Immanuel; 26, 37;
- his indebtedness to earlier political writers, 40, 46;
- his theory of human development, 47-49;
- and how this is possible, 49-51, 54;
- on the foundation of the state, 51-54, 152-154;
- the relations between states and individuals, 54, 55, 117-120, 128, 173, 174;
- the necessity for reform within the state, 55, 56, 168;
- the political and social conditions of his time, 57-59;
- his attitude to war, 58, 133, 135, 136, 137, 149-151;
- on the growing power of commerce, 59, 65, 142, 157;
- his idea of federation, 60, 68, 69, 128-137, 192;
- and ideal of perpetual peace, 61, 129, 196;
- the conditions of its realization, 62-69;
- on representative and other constitutions, 65-68, 120-128, 152, 153, 167;
- his opinion of the English constitution, 66;
- his disapproval of universal monarchy, 68, 69, 155, 156; 79, 83, 89, 100, 105;
- on the right of way, 137-142;
- on nature’s guarantee of a perpetual peace, 143-157;
- on the relation between politics and morals, 161-196;
- on revolution, 167, 168, 186-188.
L
- Lawrence, T. J.; 9, 78, 81.
- Leibniz, Gottfried W.; 36;
- his criticism of St. Pierre, 37, 38, 58, 106.
- Locke, John; and the golden age, 3, 4;
- on the original contract, 53;
- on revolution, 53, 188; 67, 133.
- Luther, Martin; on war, 19.
M
- Machiavelli, Nicolo; 162.
- Maine, Henry; on Grotius and the Jus Gentium, 24, 25.
- Military service; of Christians, 14, 16, 18, 19;
- compulsory, 89;
- voluntary, 111.
- Monarchy, universal; the ideal of Dante, 68, 69;
- Montesquieu, Baron de; on self-preservation, 83;
N
- Napoleon Bonaparte; Empire of, 69, 71, 72, 76, 77.
O
- Origen; on military service, 14, 15.
- Original Contract; 40;
- as understood by Rousseau, 52;
- by Hobbes, 52, 53;
- by Hooker, 52;
- by Hume, ib.;
- by Kant, ib.;
- by Locke, 53.
P
- Paris Congress (1856); 86.
- Peace, perpetual; the dream of, 29-33;
- projects of, by Penn, 30;
- by Henry IV., 30, 33, 34;
- by St. Pierre, 30, 32, 34-37;
- Rousseau’s attitude to, 38-40, 106;
- for Kant an ideal, 61, 129;
- the articles of, 62-69, 107-142, 158-160;
- the guarantee of, 143-157.
- Plato; on the origin of the state, 5;
- on war, 8, 41;
- on the relation between ethics and politics, 162.
- Politics; and morals, according to Kant, 161-196;
- to Plato, 162;
- to Aristotle, ib.;
- to Hume, ib.;
- sophistical maxims of, 170-172.
- Puffendorf, Samuel; 27;
- on intervention, 64, 131.
Q
R
- Reformation; and military service, 18;
- and international law, 21, 24.
- Religion; Roman, and war, 9;
- Jewish, 9-11;
- Mohammedan, 10;
- Buddhist, and conversion, 12;
- Christian, and war, 12-20.
- Revolution, right of; according to Hobbes, 41, 53;
- and Spinoza, 41;
- according to Locke, 53;
- to Rousseau, ib.;
- to Kant, 167, 186-188.
- Right of way; Vattel on, 65, 138;
- Ritchie, D. G.; on Rousseau, 3;
- on Locke and the golden age, ib., 52, 85, 98.
- Romans; and war, 7, 8, 9, 22, 23;
- and international law, 22, 23.
- Rousseau, J. J.; and the state of nature, 2, 3, 52; 26, 28;
- his criticism of St. Pierre, 38-40;
- his views on militarism, 39;
- on the original contract, 52;
- on revolution, 53, 188; 61, 67, 100, 132, 134;
- on democratic and republican governments, 153;
- on the depravity of man, 173.
- Russia; Alexander I. of, 80;
- the Czar of, 90;
- the backward civilization of, 92, 93, 94, 95.
S
- Schiller, Friedrich von; on war and peace, 71, 72, 73, 75.
- Schopenhauer, Arthur; 43.
- Spinoza, Benedict; on the state of nature, 41;
- State of nature; according to Rousseau, 2, 3;
- and the golden age, 3;
- Hobbes’ theory of, 4, 40, 41, 118;
- according to Hume a philosophical fiction, 41;
- according to Kant, 117-120.
- St. Pierre, Castel de; 30, 32, 33;
T
- Trendelenburg, F. A.; 75.
V
- Vattel, Emerich; his Droit des Gens, 28, 29;
- Voltaire, François de; 33, 37, 38.
W
- War; religious, 16;
- private, 17, 20, 29;
- dynastic, 38, 57, 123;
- Kant’s attitude to, 58, 133, 135, 136, 137, 149-151;
- its influence on progress, 70, 96, 103;
- views of Hegel on, 71, 72, 75;
- of Schiller, 71, 72, 73, 75;
- of Moltke, 71, 73, 74, 75;
- under altered conditions, 76, 77, 78;
- when just, 84, 85;
- future probable causes of, 94, 95;
- honorable conduct of, 114, 115.
- Wycliffe, John; and fighting clergy, 18.