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Articles 1 - 8 of 8

Full-Text Articles in Law

Why Withdrawal Of Life-Support For Pvs Patients Is Not A Family Decision, Charles Baron Aug 2013

Why Withdrawal Of Life-Support For Pvs Patients Is Not A Family Decision, Charles Baron

Charles H. Baron

No abstract provided.


The Domestic Fourth Amendment Rights Of Aliens: To What Extent Do They Survive United States V. Verdugo-Urquidez?, Michael Scaperlanda Dec 1990

The Domestic Fourth Amendment Rights Of Aliens: To What Extent Do They Survive United States V. Verdugo-Urquidez?, Michael Scaperlanda

Michael A. Scaperlanda

No abstract provided.


Why Withdrawal Of Life-Support For Pvs Patients Is Not A Family Decision, Charles Baron Dec 1990

Why Withdrawal Of Life-Support For Pvs Patients Is Not A Family Decision, Charles Baron

Charles H. Baron

No abstract provided.


"The Nation As An Economic Unit:" Keynes, Roosevelt, And The Managerial Ideal, Richard Adelstein Dec 1990

"The Nation As An Economic Unit:" Keynes, Roosevelt, And The Managerial Ideal, Richard Adelstein

Richard Adelstein

The First New Deal as central economic planning, and the lost opportunity to reconstruct the federal government toward peaceful Keynesianism.


Bright Lines, George D. Brown Dec 1990

Bright Lines, George D. Brown

George D. Brown

No abstract provided.


Deciding For Bigness, Richard Adelstein Dec 1990

Deciding For Bigness, Richard Adelstein

Richard Adelstein

Antitrust as a constitutional constraint on the growth of firms.


The New Metaphysics: The Interpretive Turn In Jurisprudence, Stephen M. Feldman Dec 1990

The New Metaphysics: The Interpretive Turn In Jurisprudence, Stephen M. Feldman

Stephen M. Feldman

A debate between realists and antirealists has characterized western metaphysics. While metaphysical realists ground existence on an objective world, antirealists ground existence on a thinking subject and human culture. The argument in jurisprudence, as elsewhere, is that either we are capable of objective knowledge or we are doomed to free-floating subjectivism. We demand the impossible -- absolute objectivity -- to avoid the catastrophic -- unconstrained subjectivity. The interpretive turn attempts to move beyond this insoluble dilemma, the either/or of objectivity and subjectivity. Thus, in jurisprudence, the interpretive turn is well worth taking if only because it offers the possibility of …


Mr. Justice Antonin Scalia: A Renaissance Of Positivism And Predictability In Constitutional Adjudication, Beau James Brock Dec 1990

Mr. Justice Antonin Scalia: A Renaissance Of Positivism And Predictability In Constitutional Adjudication, Beau James Brock

Beau James Brock

This article pinpoints Justice Scalia's judicial methodology and contrasts it with the pragmatism of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.