the question stated in, 302 his inscription on the gate of on the first Reform Act, 213 on the distinction between per- as an antidote to the evils of function of the State as to, 80 characteristics of true, 157 Contract, function of the State as to, 88- what a, is, 89, 90 Cossa, Professor Luigi, the usual conception of a, 256 scientifically considered, falls the mens rea essential to, 280 graduation of punishment to, responsibility of society for, Criminal, true conception of a, 256, 280 see Crime. Criminal anthropology, is frankly determinist, 258-260, its diagnosis of a malefactor, its treatment of malefactors, is, really, unscientific, 265 is of account, chiefly, as a sign is incompatible with the appli- recommends the elimination of causes of the formation of, 304 function of the State concern- should be punished by the inflic- Danville, M., on crime, 258 Death penalty, the, 49, 288-290, Declaration of Independence, the false proposition in, 19 epidemics of, 93 its genesis, 170-175 Mill's warnings against, 176-178 how expounded by Mr. John why False, 180-183 the a priori apology for, 183- 186 the Utilitarian apology for, the Sentimental apology for, its working in France, 194-203 its working in the United in England, 212–217 its essence not political but its logical issue Socialism, 222, seven antidotes proposed for, reasons for believing that some on the principle of False Demo- on the necessity for the organi- 249 the controversy concerning, Devas, Mr. C. S., on the present condition of on the benefit of Trade Unions, on an evil result of Trade Dicey, Professor, on the Referendum, 233, 234 in what sense may be truly pre- Double Election, as an antidote to the evils of Drill, M., Dimitri, on criminal anthropology, 257 as a reformer of social morali- Edmund, St., of Canterbury, on the rich and the poor, 307 duty and right of the father in popular, as a remedy for the Electoral register, the English, on the President of the United on the meanness of American Equality, religious, alleged right of, 64 Faddists, the tyranny of, 87, 88 is historically the origin of the rests upon the chastity of corruption of, is the dissolution Fauchet, the Abbé, as Socialist, 125 on Determinism, 269 on the American Government, Force, not a sufficient explanation of Fouché, as Socialist, 126 his conception of a Parliament, Foxwell, Professor, on an outbreak of individual- non-existence of representative result of Republican Govern- the working of False Demo- not only a right, but a trust, 47 Free will, the controversy concerning, on the House of Lords, 241 on the ruin of the British Con- on power and property, 221 on the law of nature, 9 on the first Reform Act, 214 on the Elmira system, 265, 266 of the Middle Ages, 113, 114 Hugo, Victor, his Claude Gueux, 302 on the disaster of our time, the true account of, 273 definition of, 280 Jacobins, absurdities and atrocities of, Jessel, Sir George, his statement of the general Junius, on the responsibility of min- Laws, of conduct, what they are, 1 of nature, what they are, 2, on the prostitute, 81, 82 criminal, on what principle it Leo XIII., Pope, on usury, 91 on the justum pretium of la- on contemporary politicians, 7 is the underlying principle of a in the Church of England, 65 Spinoza's account of, 37 on the reciprocal obligations necessary, 68 reform of, in Russia, 69 on the degradation of prison a determinist and more, 258 the Prussian, 143 the Austrian, 144 an opinion of a very learned |