Comments on: Notes on the Relationship between Sovereignty and Commonwealth https://thejosias.net/2014/11/01/notes-on-the-relationship-between-sovereignty-and-commonwealth/ Non declinavit ad dextram sive ad sinistram. Mon, 19 Mar 2018 12:17:55 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.2 By: Dubium: When Is Any Government “Legitimate”? | The Josias https://thejosias.net/2014/11/01/notes-on-the-relationship-between-sovereignty-and-commonwealth/#comment-9 Fri, 22 May 2015 14:33:44 +0000 https://thejosias.net/?p=38#comment-9 […] Lendmann begins, and attempt to displace the paradigm of overarching sovereignty or legitimacy. (This has a precedent on The […]

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By: Dubium: When Is Any Government “Legitimate”? | The Josias https://thejosias.net/2014/11/01/notes-on-the-relationship-between-sovereignty-and-commonwealth/#comment-11 Fri, 22 May 2015 14:33:44 +0000 https://thejosias.net/?p=38#comment-11 […] Lendmann begins, and attempt to displace the paradigm of overarching sovereignty or legitimacy. (This has a precedent on The […]

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By: Note on a Novel Recommended by the Pope | Sancrucensis https://thejosias.net/2014/11/01/notes-on-the-relationship-between-sovereignty-and-commonwealth/#comment-8 Wed, 21 Jan 2015 20:11:10 +0000 https://thejosias.net/?p=38#comment-8 […] Although I am monarchist myself, I nevertheless think that Benson here misunderstands what it means for rulers to receive their authority from God. Rulers do indeed receive their authority from God, but their reception of such authority is essentially tied to their role in caring for the common good of society, and thus they must actually have subjects in order to be rulers. As Elliot Milco puts it in The Josias: […]

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By: Note on a Novel Recommended by the Pope | Sancrucensis https://thejosias.net/2014/11/01/notes-on-the-relationship-between-sovereignty-and-commonwealth/#comment-10 Wed, 21 Jan 2015 20:11:10 +0000 https://thejosias.net/?p=38#comment-10 […] Although I am monarchist myself, I nevertheless think that Benson here misunderstands what it means for rulers to receive their authority from God. Rulers do indeed receive their authority from God, but their reception of such authority is essentially tied to their role in caring for the common good of society, and thus they must actually have subjects in order to be rulers. As Elliot Milco puts it in The Josias: […]

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