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Fordham Law School

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Journal

Law

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Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Applying The Laws Of Logic To The Logic Of Laws, Hillel Bavli Jan 2006

Applying The Laws Of Logic To The Logic Of Laws, Hillel Bavli

Fordham Urban Law Journal

The article begins by discussing the difficulties of proving consistency within a formal legal system generally. After establishing the importance of a formalized legal model as a prerequisite of rigorous examination of consistency, it proceeds to investigate issues intrinsic to the current system of law that may prevent formalization of a just legal system as currently conceived. The article argues that flexibility inherent in a just legal system may foreclose the possibility of legal formalization or any comprehensive model thereof. The article concludes, however, that a model whose purpose is the examination of consistency within a system need not necessarily …


A Lawyer's Mischellany: Scriptural Resources For Christian Lawyers, Joseph Allegretti Jan 1999

A Lawyer's Mischellany: Scriptural Resources For Christian Lawyers, Joseph Allegretti

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This Essay provides resources for spiritual sustenance and to help bridge the gap between what one does as a lawyer and one professes as a Christian. The author provides a dozen passages from Scripture --some from the Hebrew Scriptures, some from the New Testament -- that the author found relevant to the life and work of Christian lawyers. After each quotation, the author includes a few comments to spark further reflection.


The Profession Of Religion And Law, Ted Dotts Jan 1999

The Profession Of Religion And Law, Ted Dotts

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This essay provides definitions for the terms "religion," "law" and "profession." The professional bears the power to bid forth -- to announce, command, tell, declare and make aware. Religion is the power to relate. Law is the power to regulate. The author concludes that religion and law are givens of human living. The question is not whether to have one or the other. The question is how we live with these realities.