Titles
Subjects
Languages
Search
Contact
Set Language
volume
collection
Export a Citation
Print View
hide main text
show main text
just this volume
show all volumes
Edition Information
Volume I.
Volume II.
Collapse All
|
Expand All
frontmatter
body
book XX.: of laws in relation to commerce, considered in its nature and distinctions.
book XXI.: of laws relative to commerce, considered in the revolutions it has met with in the world.
book XXII.: of laws in relation to the use of money.
book XXIII.: of laws in the relation they bear to the number of inhabitants.
book XXIV.: of laws as relative to religion, considered in itself, and in its doctrines.
chap. I.: of religion in general.
chap. II.: a paradox of mr. bayle’s.
chap. III.: that a moderate government is most agreeable to the christian religion, and a despotic government to the mahometan.
chap. IV.: consequences from the character of the christian religion, and that of the mahometan.
chap. V.: that the catholic religion is most agreeable to a monarchy, and the protestant to a republic.
chap. VI.: another of mr. bayle’s paradoxes.
chap. VII.: of the laws of perfection in religion.
chap. VIII.: of the connection between the moral laws and those of religion.
chap. IX.: of the essenes.
chap. X.: of the sect of stoics.
chap. XI.: of contemplation.
chap. XII.: of penances.
chap. XIII.: of inexpiable crimes.
chap. XIV.: in what manner religion has an influence on civil laws.
chap. XV.: how false religious are sometimes corrected by the civil laws.
chap. XVI.: how the laws of religion correct the inconveniencies of a political constitution.
chap. XVII.: the same subject continued.
chap. XVIII.: how the laws of religion have the effect of civil laws.
chap. XIX.: that it is not so much the truth or falsity of a doctrine which renders it useful or pernicious to men in civil government, as the use or abuse of it.
chap. XX.: the same subject continued.
chap. XXI.: of the metempsychosis.
chap. XXII.: that it is dangerous for religion to inspire an aversion for things in themselves indifferent.
chap. XXIII.: of festivals.
chap. XXIV.: of the local laws of religion.
chap. XXV.: the inconveniency of transplanting a religion from one country to another.
chap. XXVI.: the same subject continued.
book XXV.: of laws as relative to the establishment of religion and its external polity.
book XXVI.: of laws, as relative to the order of things on which they determine.
book XXVII.: of the origin and revolutions of the roman laws on successions.
book XXVIII.: of the origin and revolutions of the civil laws among the french.
book XXIX.: of the manner of composing laws.
book XXX.: theory of the feudal laws among the franks, in the relation they bear to the establishment of the monarchy.
book XXXI.: theory of the feudal laws among the franks, in the relation they bear to the revolutions of their monarchy.
endmatter
Volume III.
Volume IV.
SUBSCRIBER:
past masters commons
Annotation Guide:
All Collections
>
The Complete Works of Montesquieu. Electronic Edition.
>
Volume II.
The Complete Works of Montesquieu. Electronic Edition.
Volume II.
hide table of contents
show table of contents
Jump to page:
Go to next volume
Go to next volume