Euroopa ideede ajaloo eksami kordamisküsimused
To prove this grand position of his, he tells us, p. 12. Menare born in subjection to their parents, and therefore cannot be
free. And this authority of parents, he calls royal authority, p. 12, 14. Fatherly authority, right of fatherhood, p. 12, 20. One
would have thought he would, in the beginning of such a work as this, on which was to depend the authority of princes,
and the obedience of subjects, have told us expresly, what that fatherly authority is, have defined it, though not limited it,
because in some other treatises of his he tells us, it is unlimited, and* unlimitable; he should at least have given us such an
account of it, that we might have had an entire notion of this fatherhood, or fatherly authority, whenever it came in our way
in his writings: this I expected to have found in the first chapter of his Patriarcha. But instead thereof, having, 1. en