This term appears in the GATS where it deals with the international movement of employees of firms that are providing services in another country. Persons are called "natural" to distinguish them from "juridical persons," such as partnerships or corporations, that are given certain rights of persons under the law.
A human being, not a legal entity, afforded certain rights under the United States Constitution.
a human being, as distinct from legal persons such as companies or organisations
a human being as opposed to an entity recognised by the law as a 'legal person', such as a company
a human who has become a person - a corporate person
a legal entity as well and also means an artificial entity and does not mean a living man or a Sovereign
a legal subject, endowed with legal capacity and the holder of rights and duties
an individual human being
a slave status imposed upon a human body, thus supposedly making the fiction a natural thing - but it is still a fiction - make-believe
Individual (does not include corporate entities).
An individual as a subject of legal and/or business relations.
an individual – as opposed to a company or partnership
A living, breathing human being, as opposed to a legal entity such as a corporation. Different rules and protections apply to natural persons and corporations, such as the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, which applies only to natural persons.
In jurisprudence, a natural person is a human being perceptible through the senses and subject to physical laws, as opposed to an artificial person, i.e., an organization that the law treats for some purposes as if it were a person distinct from its members or owner.