JMC :
The State and the Church
/ by Ryan and Millar
Index
- Acton, Lord, History of Freedom and other Essays, 101, 145, 196, 197.
- Adams, John Quincy, 99, 109, 110, 137.
- American Constitution, 149.
- Amette, Cardinal, 273.
- Anti-Bellarmine Colleges, 115.
- Aristotle, 68, 77, 78, 79, 82, 155, 167, 257; on popular sovereignty, 77, 78, 79; Politics, 77, 78, 79, 87, 88, 90.
- Augustus Triumphus, 44.
- Austin, .John, 40, 125, 158, 252; Lecture on Jurisprudence, 200.
- Austinian Theory, 39, 150, 200.
- Bacon, 125.
- Baltimore, Lord, 285.
- Bancroft, Archbishop, 123.
- Barbarossa, Frederick, 111.
- Barber, Francis, 160.
- Beard, Charles A., An Economic Interpretation. of the Constitution of the United States, 166.
- Beattie, 155; Essay on the Immutability of Truths, 156.
- Bellarmine, 113, 115, 116, 133, 136, 161, 162, 173, 175, 177; Apology, 116: De Controversiis, 115, 1 17; De Laicis, 96, 115, 134; De Summo Pontifice, 120; denial of Divine Right, 178.
- Benedict XV, 29, 325; Encyclical on International Reconciliation, 309-317; on protection of morals and religion, 229.
- Bentham, 125, 158, 174, 183.
- Berkley, 156.
- Bill of Rights, 186.
- Billot, Cardinal, on origin of civil
- authority, 62-67.
- Bismarck, 145.
- Blackstone, 168, 169, 170.
- Blair, Hugh, 154.
- Bodin, Jean, 112; on the patriarchal state, 90.
- Bolingbroke, 132; Patriot King, 172.
- Boniface VIII, 114; Bull "Unam Sanctam," 48.
- Bouquillon, 252; Theologia Moralis Fundamentalis, 245, 267.
- Boudinot, Elias, 160.
- Bracton, 123.
- Brown, Alexander, The First Republic in America, 128.
- Brown, Sir Thomas, Religio Medici, 133.
- Bryce, Viscount, 159; Modern Democracies, 148; on natural law, 105.
- Buffier, 178; Traité De Premières Vérite\s, 156.
- Burgess, 201.
- Burke, 125, 126, 150, 151, 153, 161, 163, 171, 178, 179; Address to the King, 170; Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs, 103, 177; correspondence, 137; Fragments of a Tract of Popery Laws, 121, 122, 139; on liberty, 146, 147; Progress of Science Relative to Law and Government, 126; Reflections on the French Revolution, 99, 141; Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discon tents, 138, 170.
- Burlemaqui, 167.
- Butler, 142.
- Calvin, 115, 130, 162.
- Campbell, Lives of the Chief Justices, 125; Philosophy of Rhetoric, 156.
- Campion, 133.
- Carlyle, A. J., 117, 118, 148; History of Medieval Political Theory, 109; on liberty, 145.
- Castelein, Philosophia Moralis et Socialis, 224.
- Catholic Participation in Politics, 23, 60, 61.
- Catholic State, 35.
- Catholicism and Americanism, 282-298.
- Cathrein, Philosophia Moralis, 224.
- Charles I, 123, 136.
- Christian Citizenship, 265.
- Christian Constitution of States, 1-25
- Church and Labor, Ryan-Husslein, 232.
- Church and State, comparative dignity of, 6, 39; state’s attitude toward church, 4, 32-39.
- Church as Civil Ruler, 7, 41.
- Church Rights Denied by State, 14, 52.
- Cicero, 140, 167; De Officiis, 101; Morals, 132.
- Civil Authority, moral origin of, 62-68.
- Civil Law, basis of, 245-248; moral obligation of, 244-259.
- Civil Power of Church, 41, 42.
- Civil Rights, 276, 277-281.
- Civil Society, historic origin of, 79-84.
- Clarke, 131.
- Clement V, 48.
- Coke, Sir Edward, 122, 123, 124.
- Combination Acts, 211.
"Common good," 204.
- Concordats, 9, 52.
- Consent of the Governed, 53, 84-98.
- Constantine, 286.
- Contrat Social, 63, 70-75, 91, 92, 94.
- Corby, Rev. William, 296.
- Costa Rosetti, Synopsis Philosophia Moralis, 207.
- Cronin, The Science of Ethics, 221, 224, 245.
- Cudworth, 130, 131, 141; Intellectual System, 132.
- Cumberland, 131.
- Curtis, G. C., Constitutional History of the United States,
- Dante, Convivio, 102; Monarchia, 111.
- De HaIler, Contrat Social, 91, 92.
- De Laicis, 117.
- De Maistre, Joseph, Essai sur le Principe Générateur des Constitutions Politiques, 148, 149.
- De Regimine Principum, 110, 111.
- Descartes, 156.
- Declaration of Breda, 130.
- Declaration of Independence, 98, 99, 100, 148, 163, 167, 174, 190, 277.
- Declaration of the Rights of Man, 125, 148.
- Defensio Fidei Catholicae, 173.
- Democracy, 28, 99-145.
- Deposition of Temporal Rulers by Popes, 43.
"Der Nationale Machtzweck," 199.
- Distributive Justice, 262.
- Divine Right of Kings, 26, 27, 76, 94, 98, 127, 133, 134.
- Doleman, 133.
- Droysen, Johann Justav, Outline of the Principles of History, 184.
- Dryden, 132; Religio Laici, 133;
- History of the League, 134.
- Duns Scotus, 162.
- Duties of the Citizen, 260-275.
- Elliot, Sir Thomas, The Governor, 102.
- Emerson, R. W., 304.
- Encyclicals; See Benedict XV, Gregory XV, and Leo XIII.
- Faber, 136.
- Federalist, the, 163.
- Fenelon, 48; Direction pour la Conscience d’un Roi, 103.
- Filmer, Sir Robert, 135, 136, 177; Patriarcha, 91, 134, 175.
- Forum Judicum, 102, 103, 107.
- Fragmentum Pragense, 109.
- France, Church and State in, 30.
- Franklin, 153.
- Freedom of Speech, 16, 55, 239-243.
"French Enlightenment," 171, 192.
- Functions of the State, erroneous theories, 202-220; essential functions, 223; optional functions, 222, 223; proper theories, 221-233.
- Garner, James W., Introduction to Political Science, 196, 198, 222.
- General Welfare Theory of State Functions, 202.
- Gooch, G. P., 121, 122, 129.
- Gosselin, 48.
- Government, forms of, 3, 28.
- Government Ownership, 247.
- Gregory VII, 111.
- Gregory XVI, Mirari Vos, 17.
- Grotius, 167, 183; De Jure Belli et Pacis, 135.
- Guillaume de Rochfort, 112.
- Guizot, 158; on liberty, 145; Representative Government, 102, 103.
- Hamilton, Alexander, 132, 146, 150, 153, 160, 161, 163-167, 180, 181, 185, 187, 193, 194. Letters from Phocion, 152; The Farmer Refuted, 159, 175; Alexander Hamilton, by H. Jones Ford, 160.
- Hegel, 203; conception of the omnipotent state, 39, 198.
- Henry IV of Germany, 111.
- Henry of Segusia, 44.
- Hergenroether, Catholic Church and Christian State, 48, 49.
- Hill, David Jayne, 166.
- Hillquit-Ryan, Socialism, Promise or Menace? 217.
- Hobbes, 76, 125, 130, 131, 132, 140, 146, 159, 168.
- Holt, An Introduction to the Study of Government, 222.
- Hooker, Richard, 128; Ecclesiastical Polity, 103.
- Hume, Henry, 125, 157, 158, 159;
- History of England, 154.
- Hunt, Gaillard, 161, 175, 176.
- Hues, 115.
- Hutcheson, 155, 158.
- Immigrants, care of, 319, 320.
- Independence of State, 7, 42.
- Individualistic Theory of State Functions, 202-217.
- Industrial Regulation by State, 230-233.
- Intention of Legislator, 249-253.
- International Reconciliation, 309-317.
- International Relations, 322-335.
- Ireland, Archbishop, 282-298.
- Isadore of Seville, 106, 107, 110.
- Ius Gentium, 105, 106.
- Ivo of Chartres, 110.
- James I of England, 27, 134; controversy with Bellarmine, 122; on the Jesuits, 128, 129; Political Works of, 26; Premonition to all Most Mightie Monarches, Kings, Free Princes, and States of Christendome, 115.
- James II, 136.
- Janet, Paul, 77; Histoire de La Science Politique, 118; on popular sovereignty, 75.
- Jefferson, 148, 161, 162, 174, 175, 176, Memoir, 153; on the Declaration of Independence, 167.
- Jesuit Doctrines on Government, 122,
- Jingoism, 266.
- Joint Jurisdiction, 8, 49.
- Juridical Origin of Civil Society, 84-98.
- Kaimes, Lord, Sketches of the History of Man, 157.
- Kant, Immanuel, 142; on individualist theory, 210, 211, 212, 216, 217.
- Knox, Hugh, An Address to America by a Friend in a Foreign Government, 160.
- La Boetie, De la Servitude Volontaire, 158.
- Lactantius, 106, 107, 108.
- Laissez-faire, 209, 262.
- Laski, Harold J., 43; on State omnipotence, 41.
- Law and Liberty, 234-243.
- League of Nations, 315.
- Lecky, History of European Morals, 142; on Jesuits, 113, 121.
- Leo XIII, 1-25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 37, 39, 40, 42, 49, 52, 53, 54, 55, 195, 207, 219, 232, 286, 298; Au Mileu des Sollicitudes, 66, 67; Catholicity in the United States, 33; Christian Constitution of States, 1-25, 244; Diuturnum Illud, 63; Libertas Praestantissimum, 234-243; on Human Liberty, 58; On the Condition of Labor, 204, 231, 233, 261, 262.
- Liberty, religious, 38; of conscience, 243; of the press, 239; of self-ruin, 19; of speech, 239; of teaching, 240.
- Lieber, Francis, Civil Liberty and Self-Government, 101, 182, 183.
- Lige in France, 103.
- Lilly, First Principles in Politics, 224.
- Lingard, History of Anglo Saxon Church, 102.
- Locke, 125, 126, 137, 156, 161, 163, 167, 176, 186; Second Treatise of Civil Government, 74; Two Treatises on Government, 134-136.
- Louis XIV, 136.
- Lowell, James Russell, 149.
- Loyalty, 264, 265.
- Luther, 115, 130, 162; Letter on the Federal Convention, 187.
- MacKintosh, Sir James, 136.
- Machiavelli, 112, 114, 130, 201.
- Macksey, Charles B., 68-98.
- Madison, 146, 153, 154, 160, 161, 162, 163, 175, 190.
- Magna Charta, 123, 124, 186.
- Maimhourg, History of the League, 134.
- Maine, Sir Henry, 150; Ancient Law, 148; Popular Government, 149.
- Maitland, 183; History of English Law, 110.
- Manning, Cardinal, the Vatican Decrees and their Bearing on Civil Allegiance, 48.
- Mariana, 133.
- Marsiglio of Padua, 114.
- Mason, George, 176.
- Mazzini, on liberty, 145.
- Medieval Inheritance of Liberty, 166-194.
- Metternich, 145.
- Meyer, Theodore, Institutiones Juris Naturalis, 198, 224, 232, 251.
- Michael de L’Hospital 103.
- Middle Ages, church and state in, 34; deposing power in, 45; toleration in, 35.
- Military Service, duty of, 269, 270.
- Mill, J. 5., 142.
- Millar, John, 125; Historical View of the English Government from the Settlement of the Saxons in Britian to the Revolution of 1688, 154.
- Milton, 129, 132; Treatise of Civil Power in Ecclesiastical Causes, 158.
- Minimum Standards of Living, 262.
- Molina, 133.
- Montesquieu, 167, 187, 188; L'esprit des Lois, 158.
- Moral Authority of Governments, 3, 26.
- National Relations, 318-322.
- Natural Law, 143, 235.
- Natural Rights, 276, 277-281.
- Naturalism, 24.
- Navarrus, 173.
- Noldin, 275.
- Obedience, civil, 263, 264.
- Paine, Thomas, 137.
- Parsons, 133.
- Pastoral Letter of the American Hierarchy. 27, 30, 227, 228, 237, 238, 318-325.
- Patriotism, 299-308.
- Paulus, on penal laws, 140.
- Penal Laws, 253-256.
- Pendleton, 176.
- Penn, William, 285.
"Petition of Right," 123, 124.
- Phelps, Anson, 289.
- Philip the Fair, 114.
- Philippe de Commines, Memoirs, 111, 112.
- Physiocrats, 209.
- Pius IX, 17, 18, 37.
- Pluralistic State. 201.
- Pohle, 34, 38.
- Politics, duty of, 320, 321.
- Pollard, A. F., 125; Evolution of Parliament, 107.
- Pollock, History of English Law, 110.
- Pope, Alexander, 132.
- Popular Acceptance, 256-259.
- Popular Determination of Government, 64.
- Power, on principle of consent, 127; on principle of utility, 127.
- Pot, Philippe, 112.
"Practical Liberty," 145-165.
- Price, 137, 188.
- Priestly, 137.
- Primary Functions of State, 224-226.
"Private Judgmeat," 157.
- Private Property, right to, 278, 279.
- Protestant Reformation, 32.
- Public Charity, 228, 229.
- Public Education, 227.
- Public Health, 229, 230.
- Public Office, 321, 322.
- Public Profession of Religion by State, 4, 29.
- Public Protection of Religion and Morals, 19, 60, 229, 230.
- Public Works, 226.
- Puffendorf, 167, 183.
- Quasi-Contract, 137, 138.
- Rationalism, 24.
- Regulation of Commerce, 230.
- Reid, 155; Inquiry into the Human Mind, 156.
- Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 156.
- Rights of Citizens, 276-281.
- Ritchie, David G., 148.
- Rives, William E., Life and Times of Madison, 155.
- Rousseau, 100, 125, 126, 137, 161, 171,
- 186, 190, 191; Social Contract, 70-75, 92, 94.
- Saint Ambrose, 104, 106.
- Saint Augustine, 19, 102, 106, 309; on consent of the governed, 76; on a political society, 76; Treatise on the City of God. 2, 102.
- Saint John Chrysostom, 104.
- Saint Paul, 3, 4, 8, 73, 104, 316.
- Saint Thomas Aquinas, 128, 130, 136, 162, 245, 246; De Regimine Principum, 110, 111; Sum ma Theologica, 76, 77, 87.
- Sandys, Sir Edward, 128.
- Santarel, 133.
- Satolli, Francis, 298.
- Schism of the West, 114.
- Scholastic doctrine on sovereignty, 75, 98, 107.
- Seabury, 167.
- Selden, John, 141; Table Talk, 129.
- Seligman, Essays in Taxation, 268.
- Shaftesbury, 129, 155, 158.
- Shakespeare, 103.
- Sidney, 136, 137, 163, 167, 176; Discourses Concerning Government, 134, 135.
- Simancha, 133.
- Small, Dr. William, 153.
- Smith, Adam, 154; Wealth of Nations, 209.
- Social Contract, 63, 70-75, 91, 92, 94.
- Social Reconstruction Program, 232.
- Socialist Theory of State Functions, 202, 217-220.
- South America, relations of Church and state in, 30.
- Sovereignty, 15, 53, 75, 92, 168-198, 257, 258; popular, 15, 53, 118, 119, see also Rousseau; scholastic doctrine of, 75, 98, 107.
- Spalding, Archbishop, 299-308.
- Spencer, Herbert, 152, 189, 210, 211, 212, 216, 217.
- Sa, Emanuel, 133.
- State Attitude toward Church, 4, 32, 39.
- State, end of, 192-207; functions of, 208-233.
- State Management of Industries, 202.
- State Omnipotence, 59, 198, 202.
- State Ownership, 202.
- Studies in the Problem of Sovereignty, Laski, 43.
- Suarez, Francisco, 79, 113, 133, 135, 38, 141, 154, 161, 162, 173, 181, 182, 248, 249, 250, 252; De Fide, 35; De Legibus, 118, 122, 143, 174, 175, 184, 186, 192, 193, 233, 246; Defensio Fidei Catholicae, 118, 122; denial of Divine Right, 95, 178; on Sovereignty, 257, 258.
- Summa Theologica, 76, 77, 87.
- Syllabus of 79 Propositions, 18, 58, 59, 60.
- Talleyrand, 165.
- Tanquerey, 252, 255; De Justitia, 268, 270, 271, 274.
- Taparelli, S. J., on sovereignty, 92.
- Taxation, ethics of, 267-269.
- Temporal Power of Church, 42.
- Tertullian, 23.
- Tiedman, C. J., The Unwritten Constitution of the United States,
- Toledo, Councils of, 102.
- Toleration, 35.
- Tooke, Horne, 137.
- Tucker, Josiah, Treatise Concerning Civil Government, 137, 138.
"Two Swords," doctrine of, 48.
- Union of Church and State, 34.
- United States, religious policy of, 31.
- Universal Reason, 198.
- Vattel, Le Droit des Gens, 119.
- Vermeersch, Quaestiones de Justitia, 260.
- Vincent of Lerins, Commonitorium, 99.
- Virginia Declaration of Rights, 176.
- Vision and Creed of Piers Ploughman, 111, 112.
- Voltaire, 156.
- Votaries of Enlightenment, 163.
- Voting, duty of, 270-272.
- Washington, Farewell Address, 193.
- Webster, Pelatiah, 159; A Dissertation on the Political Union and Constitution of the Thirteen United States, 159.
- Wells, H. G., Outlines of History, 201.
- Winthrop, John, Arbitrary Government Described, 132.
- William of Occam, 114.
- Wilson, James, 125, 146, 153, 154, 157, 159, 160, 161, 178, 179, 184, 185, 186, 188, 189; Considerations on the Nature and Extent of the Legislative Authority of the British Parliament, 148, 171, 173, 174, 175; on popular sovereignty, 118, 119; Speech in the Convention for the Province of Pennsylvania, 172, 173.
- Witherspoon, John, 100, 155.
- Wycliffe, 115.
- Zigliara, Cardinal, on consent of the governed, 95.
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