- The
Latin expression cogitationis poenam nemo
patitur is used in the
field of
criminal law to
express that only a conduct, and not a
simple thought, can...
- sive incendii, sive caedis.
Anima autem non sic dormit, sed vigilat, et
patitur visiones loquelas Angelorum et Dei. Ideo
somnus in ****ura vita profundior...
- "thoughtcrime". The
Party rejects the
legal principle "Cogitationis
poenam nemo
patitur" ("Thought does not
commit a crime"). It was
terribly dangerous to let...
-
according to
higher law
Legal fiction Legal precedent Cogitationis poenam nemo
patitur Ex
aequo et bono Glynn,
Timothy P.; Arnow-Richman,
Rachel S.; ****van...
- 24, 1910 the same year it
became coeducational. The
school motto, Qui
Patitur Vincit ('Who
endures wins'), was also
adopted in 1910 by
Richard Ashworth...
- Island,
Connecticut and Nova
Scotia Place of
origin Europe Founded 17th
century Founder Balthazar DeWolf Motto Vincit Qui
Patitur Estate(s)
Linden Place...
-
Catholic Church (cf.
Corpus Iuris Canonici).
Cogitationis poenam nemo
patitur No one
suffers punishment for mere intent. No one can be
punished for their...
-
truth conquers all
motto of
University of Mindanao,
Philippines vincit qui
patitur he
conquers who
endures First attributed to the
Roman scholar and satirist...
- reprinted. In 1842
Hansteen wrote his
Disquisitiones de mutationibus, quas
patitur momentum acus magneticae. He also
contributed various papers to different...
- Seneca's
Hercules Furens expresses the
notion that "quod
quisque fecit patitur", or "what each has done, he suffers". In the
third circle, the warm comforts...