An Introduction to the Philosophy of LawYale University Press, 10/09/1959 - 212 páginas "Among books of similar scope, this is the recognized classic. Those who read this book will have the strange privilege of thinking things together in the law from the beginning of world history to the moment Pound sent his writings to the printer."--American Bar Association Journal An Introduction to the Philosophy of Law gives the reader a pragmatic glimpse of the history of legal philosophy--from early Greek and Roman codification to the juridicial analysts of the nineteenth century--and shows how this history relates to modern legal concepts. |
Índice
THE FUNCTION OF LEGAL PHILOSOPHY I | 1 |
THE END OF LAW | 25 |
THE APPLICATION OF LAW | 48 |
LIABILITY | 72 |
PROPERTY | 107 |
CONTRACT | 133 |
Acknowledgments vii | |
Education and Democracy Diane Ravitch 15 | 15 |
Restoring Civil Identity Among | 122 |
Moral Disagreement Moral Education Common Ground | 142 |
Some Problems in Acknowledging Diversity Nathan Glazer | 168 |
Education and Citizenship in an Age of Pluralism | 187 |
Common Education and the Democratic Ideal | 213 |
Reflections on Jefferson Madison | 233 |
Civil Society Religion and the Formation of Citizens | 263 |
Schooling and Religious Pluralism Alan Wolfe | 279 |
Education and Democratic Citizenship Norman Nie | 30 |
CommunityBased Social Capital and Educational | 58 |
Fluctuations of Social Capital in an Urban Neighborhood | 96 |
American Exceptionalism? | 297 |
Risking Choice Redressing Inequality Joseph P Viteritti | 326 |
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