Law, Justice, and the Common Good: The Great Debate and a Search for MeaningSidney Hyman University Press of America, 1988 - 456 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 60
Página xxi
... judge so forcefully , or even the same judge on another day . We feel it again , as Ronald Dworkin observed in The Law's Empire , when a “ judge decides not just who shall have what , but who has behaved well , who has met the ...
... judge so forcefully , or even the same judge on another day . We feel it again , as Ronald Dworkin observed in The Law's Empire , when a “ judge decides not just who shall have what , but who has behaved well , who has met the ...
Página 316
... judge . For the respectable and traditional descriptions of the judicial judging process admit no such backward - working explanation . In the- ory , the judge begins with some rule or principle of law as his premsie , applies this ...
... judge . For the respectable and traditional descriptions of the judicial judging process admit no such backward - working explanation . In the- ory , the judge begins with some rule or principle of law as his premsie , applies this ...
Página 317
... judge applying rules and principles to the facts , that is , taking some rule or principle ( usually derived from opinions in earlier cases ) as his major premise , employing the facts of the case as the minor premise , and then coming ...
... judge applying rules and principles to the facts , that is , taking some rule or principle ( usually derived from opinions in earlier cases ) as his major premise , employing the facts of the case as the minor premise , and then coming ...
Contenido
Foreword by Harlan Cleveland | xi |
Law Justice and The Common Good by Sidney | xix |
GenesisOld Testament Stories of Creation | 6 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 37 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
action Amendment American Aristotle authority Bentham body called citizens civil disobedience command common concept Congress consent constitutional Corporate Crime corporation courts crime criminal decisions Declaration doctrine duty economic equal ethics evil existence fact force German Gustav Radbruch hath House of Stuart human individual injustice institutions interest Jeremy Bentham judge judicial jurisprudence justice King labor law of nature lawyer legislative legislature liberty live Lord Lozi majority man's mankind means ment moral natural law Nazi object opinion party peace person philosophy political positive law practice President principle problem Professor Hart punishment question reason reflective leader rule Section Senate sense social society sovereign stare decisis statute super-ego Supreme theory theory of justice things Thomas Hobbes thou thought tion United unjust unto utilitarian vote Western World whole