It was fun to watch the audience of mostly first-year students during Mark Johnson\u27s presentation. Seven weeks into their first semester of law school, this was clearly the most fun they had had so far. And it was easy to see why: law school takes place from the neck up, so to speak. It is so relentlessly about reason abstracted from the ordinary interests, passions, and other embodied considerations of everyday (not to mention college) life. This deracination of law is ritualized metaphorically in the black robes that enshroud our judges\u27 bodies as if to say, See, it is all from the neck up. And that is one of the most wonderful things about the work that Mark Johnson and George Lakoff have been doing: it reconnects us to ourselv...
While it is important to remember that law consists of a large number of mutually contradictory sy...
One of the great Chicago Ideas of the last hundred years is the insight, or warning, that lawmaking ...
Scientists have long recognized two distinct forms of human thought. “Type 1” reasoning is unconscio...
If law as an activity emerged naively and unpremeditated, as a direction of attention pursued withou...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
Law in the contemporary United States has achieved unchallenged ascendancy as the principal arena an...
Our conceptions of law affect how we objectify the law and ultimately how we study it. Despite a cen...
More fundamentally, law is-or, perhaps, should be-about questioning and seeking to ensure the legiti...
In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Recons...
For an individual playing a social role to behave responsibly requires participation in a process th...
Change, as John Dewey observed, is a basic fact of human experience. We are temporal creatures, and ...
What is law like? What can we compare it with in order to illuminate its character and suggest answe...
Legal activity invariably takes place within some structure, however lax. No matter how often the im...
Our conceptions of law affect how we objectify the law and ultimately how we study it. Despite a cen...
One of the striking developments in academic law in the past half century is the reconception of law...
While it is important to remember that law consists of a large number of mutually contradictory sy...
One of the great Chicago Ideas of the last hundred years is the insight, or warning, that lawmaking ...
Scientists have long recognized two distinct forms of human thought. “Type 1” reasoning is unconscio...
If law as an activity emerged naively and unpremeditated, as a direction of attention pursued withou...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
Law in the contemporary United States has achieved unchallenged ascendancy as the principal arena an...
Our conceptions of law affect how we objectify the law and ultimately how we study it. Despite a cen...
More fundamentally, law is-or, perhaps, should be-about questioning and seeking to ensure the legiti...
In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Recons...
For an individual playing a social role to behave responsibly requires participation in a process th...
Change, as John Dewey observed, is a basic fact of human experience. We are temporal creatures, and ...
What is law like? What can we compare it with in order to illuminate its character and suggest answe...
Legal activity invariably takes place within some structure, however lax. No matter how often the im...
Our conceptions of law affect how we objectify the law and ultimately how we study it. Despite a cen...
One of the striking developments in academic law in the past half century is the reconception of law...
While it is important to remember that law consists of a large number of mutually contradictory sy...
One of the great Chicago Ideas of the last hundred years is the insight, or warning, that lawmaking ...
Scientists have long recognized two distinct forms of human thought. “Type 1” reasoning is unconscio...