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Full-Text Articles in Law
Gustav Radbruch, Wolfgang Friedmann
Gustav Radbruch, Wolfgang Friedmann
Vanderbilt Law Review
As recently as the end of the last World War the name and work of Gustav Radbruch were virtually unknown in the Anglo-American legal world. In 1938 Roscoe Pound, in his encyclopedic survey, "Fifty Years of Jurisprudence," had given a concise account of Radbruch's legal philosophy in the context of his section on "neo-idealism." In 1944 Anton Hermann Chroust wrote a penetrating analysis of Radbruch's philosophy of law, and about the same time the first edition of the present writer's Legal Theory, published on the other side of the Atlantic, included Gustav Radbruch in the survey of major legal philosophers. …
Justice, Language And Communication, Julius Stone, G. Tarello
Justice, Language And Communication, Julius Stone, G. Tarello
Vanderbilt Law Review
The present paper has been concerned to stress that jurisprudence, insofar as it is not limited to analytical jurisprudence, dare not overlook the distinctive qualities either of common language, or of the special language of lawyers. For what its authors deny above all is the utility of so defining a field--like the justice-field--which is a segment of common language, in terms of a special language or logical structuring similar to those used by lawyers. Nor do we think that the presence of considerations of justice (and therefore of common language statements) in the process of the operation of law, either …
Nietzsche, Thomas A. Cowan
Nietzsche, Thomas A. Cowan
Vanderbilt Law Review
I find that the attempt to assess Nietzsche's value to contemporary jurisprudence is fraught with extreme difficulty. Not only was Nietzsche perhaps the most controversial figure in the history of ideas:' this might have happened to one whose message was simple.But in Nietzsche's case the ideas themselves are highly controversial, paradoxical and even "immoral." Like every great thinker Nietzsche was more provocative to his enemies than to his friends. His enemies took their revenge by burying him under a deluge of refutation and abuse. Apparently Nietzsche was guilty of what might be called the crime of "universal treason." He gave …
Studies In Legal Philosophy, William R. Anderson
Studies In Legal Philosophy, William R. Anderson
Vanderbilt Law Review
The hazards of planning a symposium in the field of jurisprudence derive largely from the fact that the field is itself ill-defined; the legitimate "province of jurisprudence," to use Austin's phrase, has never been fully agreed upon. A historical approach seemed reasonably satisfactory, however, and what follows is a series of studies of some of the great figures in the history of legal philosophy. Happily, no one of our contributors was satisfied with simple exegesis or even with appraising matters of purely historical importance. Each study is an attempt to deal critically with a facet of its subject which is …
Book Reviews, Edgar Bodenheimer, Robert S. Lancaster, Stanley D. Rose, Lloyd B. Urdahl
Book Reviews, Edgar Bodenheimer, Robert S. Lancaster, Stanley D. Rose, Lloyd B. Urdahl
Vanderbilt Law Review
The Great Legal Philosophers: Selected Readings in Jurisprudence Edited by Clarence Morris. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 1959. Pp. 571. $10.00.
reviewer: Edgar Bodenheimer
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Law as Large as Life: A Natural Law for Today and the Supreme Court as its Prophet By Charles P. Curtis. New York: Simon & Schuster. 1959. $3.50.
reviewer: Robert S. Lancaster
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Cases and Materials on Juriprudence By John C. H. Wu. St.Paul: West Publishing Co. 1960. Pp. xliii, 719. $12.00.
reviewer: Stanley D. Rose
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The Law and Legal Theory of the Greeks: An Introduction By J.Walter Jones. New York: Oxford University Press, …
General Principles Of Criminal Law, By Jerome Hall, James F. Fitzpatrick
General Principles Of Criminal Law, By Jerome Hall, James F. Fitzpatrick
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Disqualification Of Administrative Officials For Bias, Robert N. Covington
Disqualification Of Administrative Officials For Bias, Robert N. Covington
Vanderbilt Law Review
For centuries English and American writers on jurisprudence have been concerned with the problem of the impartial tribunal. With the rise in importance of the administrative agency, which often may function as investigator, prosecutor, and judge in the same proceeding, this concern has found a new focal point.' This note is designed to explore one question arising from the problem of administrative prejudice: When should an administrative official be disqualified from acting because of his bias? In investigating this problem, we shall examine the various formulas developed by the courts before whom disqualification has been urged; call attention briefly to …
Forum Juridicum: The Influence Of Environment On The Litigation Process, Leon Green
Forum Juridicum: The Influence Of Environment On The Litigation Process, Leon Green
Louisiana Law Review
No abstract provided.
On Law And Justice, By Alf Ross, Samuel I. Shuman
On Law And Justice, By Alf Ross, Samuel I. Shuman
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.