Political Science, asked by ankitsudan300, 3 months ago

Roman concept of justice​

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Answered by sivasmart2222
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For Romans, justice was the value that most legitimised their right to rule other peoples. Internally, it was a leading political principle that justified the power entrusted to emperors and senatorial, equestrian, and decurional elites.

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Answered by Anonymous
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The focus of this paper is justice, as issue of both law and ethics, determined through essential base of Roman approach to the law and its deep-rooted ethical value. The paper highlights the importance of reflection of Roman jurists on evolutionary development of Roman law, emphasizing the main line of distinction between the rational Roman and abstract Greek ( the idea of Aristotel formal and material justice )conception of justice and therefore to come to the conclusion that the Roman law perceived justice through function which it has the society. Roman approach to justice is the most credible expressed in Ulpinian definition given in the first chapter of the first book of Digeste: „ Jusitce is stable and enduring will to allocate to each his rights“ (Justita est constans et perpetua voluntas ius suum cuique tribuendi)'' , which clearly shows that it is not just given, but indirectly delegated, as objective which needs to be reached by the law.

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