06 1NatLInstProc3 (1949)
06 1NatLInstProc3 (1949)
06 1NatLInstProc3 (1949)
FOUNDING FATHERS
their authority
'4
mediately or immediately from this
origin."
It is not difficult to imagine the avidity with which this
reasoning was seized upon by the men who were then
protesting against what they called illegal and unwar-
ranted encroachments of such Parliamentary measures as
the Stamp Act. But Blackstone contained still more com-
fort for those Americans who were at that time still man-
fully contending for their 'immemorial rights' as English
subjects. In one of the chapters of the Commentaries we
find that
"natural persons are such as the God of Nature
formed us; artificial persons are such as are created
by human laws for the purposes of society and gov-
ernment, which are called corporations or bodies
politic. * * * By the absolute rights of individuals,
we mean those which are shown in their primary and
strictest sense, such as would belong to their persons
merely in a state of nature and which every man is
entitled to enjoy, whether out of society or in it. * * *
Hence it follows that the first and primary end of
human laws is to maintain (and regulate) these ab-
solute rights of individuals. * * * The absolute
rights of man considered as a free agent endowed
with discernment to know good from evil, and with
power of choosing those measures which appear to
him to be most desirable, are usually summed up in
one general explanation and denominated the natu-
ral liberties of mankind. This natural liberty con-
sists properly in a power of acting as one thinks fit
without any restraint or control unless by the law of
nature, being a right inherent in us by birth and one
4 Ibid., p. 31.
PHILOSOPHY OF FOUNDING FATHERS
11 Writings V, p. 343.
12 Locke, Two Treatises on Government, Bk. II,Secs. 95-101.
20 NATURAL LAW INSTITUTE PROCEEDINGS