This Article will explore a few central aspects of Smith\u27s fascinating and provocative argument. Part I considers the connection between Smith\u27s analysis and one standard Wittgensteinian argument about the causes of philosophical problems. Part II, starting from a different direction, explores the classical approach to law that Smith extols as superior to our own, raises some questions about Smith\u27s portrayal, and considers the extent to which his approach can provide better answers to the quandaries Smith discusses than does conventional modern legal thought
For some time during the late 1970s and early 1980s Ronald Dworkin\u27s claim that there are uniquel...
Here in jurisprudence made popular a distinguished law teacher comes to the defense of judges and la...
The question of the place of higher law in the ordinary practice of law is even now dogged by the br...
This is the last sentence of Steven Smith\u27s elegant book, Law\u27s Quandary: [I]n the meantime.....
Law is a practice that claims to be aligning itself with objective truth: The Law. Natural law the...
A contribution to the second law review symposium dedicated to Steven Smith’s Law’s Quandary (Harvar...
The law is one of the main subjects in Adam Smith\u2019s studies. He deals with it in the Lectures o...
In this article, the author presents his views in response to the article The Last Chapter? by criti...
The present study analyzes a little explored work of Adam Smith: his Lectures on Jurisprudence, unde...
The following essay is adapted from a paper the author presented this March, at a Lilley Foundation ...
Employment Division v. Smith controversially held that general laws that were neutral toward religio...
Throughout the twentieth century, prominent legal thinkers confidently predicted that law as it has ...
Smith lectured in jurisprudence at the University of Glasgow from 1751 to 1764, and various records ...
The dichotomy between questions of fact and questions of law serves as a starting point for the foll...
As a student of Hans-Georg Gadamer, and later a translator and important commentator on Gadamer’s ph...
For some time during the late 1970s and early 1980s Ronald Dworkin\u27s claim that there are uniquel...
Here in jurisprudence made popular a distinguished law teacher comes to the defense of judges and la...
The question of the place of higher law in the ordinary practice of law is even now dogged by the br...
This is the last sentence of Steven Smith\u27s elegant book, Law\u27s Quandary: [I]n the meantime.....
Law is a practice that claims to be aligning itself with objective truth: The Law. Natural law the...
A contribution to the second law review symposium dedicated to Steven Smith’s Law’s Quandary (Harvar...
The law is one of the main subjects in Adam Smith\u2019s studies. He deals with it in the Lectures o...
In this article, the author presents his views in response to the article The Last Chapter? by criti...
The present study analyzes a little explored work of Adam Smith: his Lectures on Jurisprudence, unde...
The following essay is adapted from a paper the author presented this March, at a Lilley Foundation ...
Employment Division v. Smith controversially held that general laws that were neutral toward religio...
Throughout the twentieth century, prominent legal thinkers confidently predicted that law as it has ...
Smith lectured in jurisprudence at the University of Glasgow from 1751 to 1764, and various records ...
The dichotomy between questions of fact and questions of law serves as a starting point for the foll...
As a student of Hans-Georg Gadamer, and later a translator and important commentator on Gadamer’s ph...
For some time during the late 1970s and early 1980s Ronald Dworkin\u27s claim that there are uniquel...
Here in jurisprudence made popular a distinguished law teacher comes to the defense of judges and la...
The question of the place of higher law in the ordinary practice of law is even now dogged by the br...