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Universal law

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In law and ethics, universal law or universal principle refers to concepts of legal legitimacy actions, whereby those principles and rules for governing human beings' conduct which are most universal in their acceptability, their applicability, translation, and philosophical basis, are therefore considered to be most legitimate.

Debate

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Cognition, experiences and intuition are the starting points of legal thought, which has to be seen through the glasses of universality and abstractness. Notwithstanding this assumption, "legal principles 1) do not contain only logic and reason and that 2) they can be different in different situations despite their equal naming. The legal rules can be identical in different legal orders while they carry different wants".[1]

On one side "universality, abstraction, and theory itself are defined in a way that undermines the perspectives of some while privileging the perspectives of others"; on the other side, "the aspiration to universality itself may stand in the way of its realization if it seals off from view the bias built into legal norms, public practices, and established institutions".[2]

Examples

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There are 12 universal laws.

1- Law of Divine Oneness

2- Law of Vibration

3- Law of Action

4- Law of Correspondence

5- Law of Cause and Effect

6- Law of Compensation

7- Law of Attraction

8- Law of Perpetual Transmutation of Energy

9- Law of Relativity

10- Law of Polarity

11- Law of Rhythm

12- Law of Gender

References

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  1. ^ Pečarič, M., Universal capacity to generalise legal principles by combining reason, logic, morals and their counterparts, The Theory and Practice of Legislation (formerly Legisprudence), 2015, 3:1-22.
  2. ^ Martha Minow, Beyond Universality, University of Chicago Legal Forum, Vol. 1989, pp. 137.

See also

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