Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chronology
Editor’s note
Bibliographical note
Glossary
The First New Science
Idea of the Work
BOOK 1 THE NECESSITY OF THE END AND THE DIFFICULTY OF THE MEANS OF DISCOVERING A NEW SCIENCE
I Reasons for our meditation on this work
II Meditation on a New Science
III The defect of such a Science if based upon the Maxims of the Epicureans and Stoics of the practices advocated by Plato
IV This Science is meditated on the Basis of the Roman jurisconsults’idea of the natural law of the gentes
V The defect of such a Science if based upon the systems of Grotius,Selden or Pufendorf
VI Reasons why this Science has hitherto been lacking among the philosophers and philologists
VII The necessity,both human and doctrinal,that the origins of this Science be derived from sacred history
VIII The difficulty of discovering the progress or continuity [proper to this Science]
IX [The difficulty of discovering the origins of humanity] from the philosophers
X [The difficulty of discovering the origins of humanity]from thephilologists
XI The necessity to seek the principles of the nature of nations by means of a metaphysics raised to contemplate a certain common mind of all the peoples
XII On the idea of a jurisprudence of mankind
XIII The severe difficulties of discovering [the mode of men’s first ideas]
BOOK II THE PRINCIPLES OF THIS SCIENCE CONCERNING IDEAS
[Introduction]
I The first principle of the nations is Providence
II The rule of the world of nations is vulgar wisdom
III The artificer of the world of nations is human will Regulated by vulgar wisdom
IV The natural order of human ideas of an eternal justice
v The natural order of human ideas of a universal justice
VI The natural order of gentile human ideas of divinity through which, depending upon whether tyey have been kept distinct or Communication with one another
VII The natural order of ideas concerning the law of thenations[asit proceeds]through their own religions, laws, languages,marriages, names, arms and governments
Corollary A practical test comparing [the results of] our reasoned principles with the vulgar tradition that the Law of the Twelve Tables came from Athens
……
[Introduction]
[Introduction] The order of development of the subject matter through which a philosophy of humanity and a universal history of the nations are formed at one and the same time
CONCLUSION OF THE WORK
INDEX
Index