Volume 1: Subscribers; Preface; Part I. Concerning the Constitution of Human Nature, and the Supreme Good: 1. Of the constitution of human nature; 2. Concerning the finer powers of perception; 3. Concerning the ultimate determinations of the will, and benevolent affections; 4. Concerning the moral sense; 5. The sense of honour and shame explained; 6. How far the several sensations appetites, passions and affections are in our power; 7. A comparison of the several sorts of enjoyment; 8. A comparison of the several tempers and characters; 9. The duties towards God; 10. The affections, duty, and worship, to be exercised toward the deity; 11. The conclusions of this book; Part II. Containing a Deduction of the More Special Laws of Nature: 1. The circumstances which encrease or diminish the moral good or evil of actions; 2. General rules of judging about the morality of actions; 3. The general notions of rights and law explained; 4. The different states of men; 5. The private rights of men; 6. The adventitious rights, real, and personal; 7. The means of acquiring property; 8. Concerning derived property. Volume 2: 9. Concerning contracts or covenants; 10. The obligations in the use of speech; 11. Concerning oaths and vows; 12. The values of goods in commerce; 13. The principal contracts in a social life; 14. Personal rights; 15. The rights arising from injuries and damages; 16. Concerning the general rights of human society; 17. The extraordinary rights arising from some singular necessity; 18. How controversies should be decided in natural liberty; Part III. Of Civil Polity: 1. Concerning the adventitious states or permanent relations; 2. The rights and duties of parents and children; 3. The duties and rights of masters and servants; 4. The motives to constitute civil government; 5. The natural method of constituting civil government; 6. The several forms of polity; 7. The rights of governors; 8. The ways in which supreme power is acquired; 9. Of the nature of civil laws and their execution; 10. The laws of peace and war; 11. The duration of the politick union, and the conclusion.