At the outset both the aggressor and his intended victim have equal rights to life, but the fact of the former using his own life for the destruction of a fellow man places him in a condition of juridic inferiority with regard to the latter.
The absence of knowledge saves him from moral guilt, but it does not alter the character of the act, considered objectively and in itself; it is yet an unjust aggression, and in the conflict, the life assailed has yet a superior juridic value.
The woman, by all means; she has a doubt worth in juridic value at the least twice as much as that which the lunatic has.
Some may say that I may not because I have lost all juridic superiority over the madman as a consequence of my sin against him.
From the juridic point of view, the object of punishment is prevention; from the moral point of view, reformation.
But it seems that this view has proceeded from a confusion of the moral with the juridic significance of the word "duty.
It is by far the more important of the two Talmuds from the juridic point of view, and it is the one that has been the chief subject of studies and commentaries.
Assuredly, there were hours in which good humor reigned over master and pupils, and we seem to see the smile that accompanied the witty sallies, and the radiance of that kindly charm which illuminated the dry juridic discussions.
The absence of knowledge saves him from moral guilt, but it does not alter the character of the act considered objectively; it is yet an unjust aggression, and in the conflict the life assailed has still a superior juridic value.
At the outset both the aggressor and the intended victim have equal rights to life, but the fact that the aggressor uses his own life for the destruction of a fellow man sets the aggressor in a condition of juridic inferiority to the victim.
In either case, nevertheless, there is active aggression directed against the victim's life, which also sets the aggressor in juridic inferiority to the victim, and permits the victim to defend his own life to extremes.
This quality of motherhood does not create any juridic imbalance of values which justifies the destruction of the rights inherent in the fetus.
There is no approach to a juridic equilibrium between these two conditions.
The moral power of the aggressor here is equal to his inborn right to life, less the unrighteous use he makes of it; while the moral power of the intended victim remains in its integrity, and has therefore a higher juridic value.
The moral order comprehends all factors that are necessary to make the free activity of man in every respect well disposed, and among these factors is the juridic order itself.
I had for a long time pursued my non-juridic studies as well as I could without the assistance of a teacher.
I continued my legal studies with patient persistence, and gradually, after having made myself master of Civil Proceedings, I worked my way through the whole of the juridic system, Roman Law excluded.
While we are in full possession of our rights we need no laws to guarantee them; but it is when those laws are encroached upon that there arises the necessity of juridic sanction for them.
We may, while enjoying those rights, forget that the juridic basis on which they stand is crumbling with age.
True it is that in some jurisdictions, and notably in New York, the courts have recognized to some extent the progress of science and its influence upon juridic theories.
She would then hawk once withjuridic deliberation, stare into the stricken young face, and majestically depart.
What she now had to say she prefaced with this juridic hawking.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "juridic" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: critical; judicial; judiciary; judicious; juridical