Laws that call for punishments or fines are 'enforced' laws.
Hammurabi's Code of ancient Mesopotamian society was important because it listed the laws and the corresponding punishments. Hammurabi's Code of ancient Mesopotamian society was important because it listed the laws and the corresponding punishments. the first time laws were put into writeing.
yes,and has many punishments and laws
A Chinese philosophy with harsh laws and punishments
look at wikipedia yo!
Hanfeizi taught that humans were naturally evil. He believed that they needed harsh laws and stiff punishments to force them to do their duty. Hope this helps :)
Imprisonment, fines and community service would be the common punishments for breaking laws in Ireland.
Taoism is not defined by laws and edicts in the same way that Western Faiths are. Taoism is about the pursuit of receptivity to the will of nature and the seasons (the Tao) and gives methods that a person should embrace to become more in line with those ideas, but it does not order its believers to hold to certain set of orthopractical tenets (i.e. you must do this or you must not do that).
The three main Chinese philosophies are Confucianism, Daoism (Taoism), and Legalism. Confucianism emphasizes moral values, ethics, and social harmony. Daoism focuses on living in harmony with the Dao (the Way) and nature. Legalism advocates for strict laws and harsh punishments to maintain social order.
Legalism is a form of philosophy that taught that government should pass strict laws. It also references that these strict laws should be enforced through harsh punishments when necessary.
I think it was because they had harsh laws and punishments.
I think it was because they had harsh laws and punishments.