| Quentin Skinner - 1978 - 428 стор.
...nation' or condition of the realm as a whole (the status regni). i What was lacking in these usages was the distinctively modern idea of the State as a form...supreme political authority within a certain defined territory.2 It has plausibly been argued that this modern and more abstract meaning may have arisen... | |
| N. T. Croally - 1994 - 328 стор.
...course, embrace disenfranchised as well as citizens; or it may be divorced from the citizen body, as in "the distinctively modern idea of the State as a form...power separate from both the ruler and the ruled".' The quotation is taken from Skinner, The Foundations of Modern Political Thought. Cambridge, 1978,... | |
| Christopher W. Morris - 2002 - 320 стор.
...are derived from 'estate'. The Spanish for state, 'el estado', preserves the etymology. usages was the distinctively modern idea of the State as a form...supreme political authority within a certain defined territory.64 The development of a new vocabulary signals a new conception of the polity, that of an... | |
| Susan L. Roberson - 2001 - 338 стор.
...should probably be identified with the state. I find it useful here to recall the current conception of the state as a form of public power separate from both ruler and ruled, constituted most basically by the exclusive right to exercise legitimate violence... | |
| Claire McEachern - 2002 - 310 стор.
...designed to function as a civil service. Indeed, an English 'state', defined according to Quentin Skinner as 'a form of public power separate from both the...supreme political authority within a certain defined territory',17 had not come into being. This was made explicit by Sir Thomas Smith in 1583: 'To be short,... | |
| William T. Cavanaugh - 2002 - 124 стор.
...entity, but only in the works of sixteenth-century French and English humanists does there emerge the modern idea of the state as 'a form of public power separate from both ruler and the ruled, and constituting the supreme political authority within a certain defined territory.... | |
| Len Scales, Oliver Zimmer - 2005 - 444 стор.
...Foundations of Modern Political Thought (2 vols., Cambridge University Press, 1978), vol. II, pp. 353-5: 'the distinctively modern idea of the State as a form...power separate from both the ruler and the ruled'. 17 Susan Reynolds, The historiography of the medieval state', in Michael Bendey (ed.), Companion to... | |
| Robin Osborne - 1985 - 304 стор.
...course, embrace disenfranchised as well as citizens;37 or it may be divored from the citizen body, as in 'the distinctively modern idea of the State as a form of public power separate from both the 8 ruler and the ruled'.38 By contrast the polis not only is the citizen body, but it embraces all the... | |
| |