You know... from iustitio, iustitiare. And it has an irregular form in which the ns ending drops.
Yeah.
Yeah.
"We feel safe when we read what we recognise, what does not challenge our way of thinking.... a steady acceptance of pre-arranged patterns leads to the inability to question what we are told."
~Camilla
Ghavrel is Ghavrel is Ghavrel
*MySmiley*
~Camilla
Ghavrel is Ghavrel is Ghavrel
*MySmiley*
What is justice?
- 13/06/2010 03:39:12 PM
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"Justice is the constant and perpetual desire to give everyone his due."
- 13/06/2010 04:08:26 PM
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Do you think there is something called justice?
- 13/06/2010 10:54:18 PM
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Well, obviously not with an existence independent of the human mind.
- 13/06/2010 11:07:38 PM
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Actually, that is being "just" not justice *NM*
- 14/06/2010 05:46:06 AM
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The original reads, "Iustitia est constans et perpetua voluntas ius suum cuique tribuens".
- 14/06/2010 01:37:10 PM
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Obviously it's a present active participle.
- 15/06/2010 12:09:54 AM
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- 15/06/2010 12:09:54 AM
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Precisely. As in the well-known Latin phrase iustitio pauperem puerum; nullum corpus me amat.
- 15/06/2010 08:54:59 AM
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To me? "Giving to each what is reasonably owed when it's reasonably possible"
- 13/06/2010 04:22:41 PM
386 Views
An attempt to answer
- 13/06/2010 09:54:03 PM
389 Views
You say that the basis of all justice is the law...
- 13/06/2010 10:51:13 PM
437 Views
Good question
- 13/06/2010 11:05:26 PM
353 Views
I'm an atheist, but stay with me here
- 13/06/2010 11:17:10 PM
469 Views
I'm a christian, but stay with me here
- 13/06/2010 11:40:48 PM
426 Views
That was moderatly obnoxious
- 14/06/2010 12:52:48 AM
490 Views
Great Question
- 14/06/2010 06:16:23 AM
378 Views

*NM*