They sometimes write as if they thought that, although obscured by false theory, false logic, and false statement, there is somewhere behind all the delusions which they expose a framework of permanent legal conceptions which is discoverable by a trained... On Early Law and Custom - Pàgina 360per Sir Henry Sumner Maine, Henry Sumner Maine - 1890 - 402 pàginesVisualització completa - Sobre aquest llibre
| Henry Sumner Maine - 1886 - 442 pàgines
...not merely curious, but highly instructive. Th< tendency of German juridical opinion, which I havt mentioned, shows that we are in danger of overestimating...may always be fitted. What I have stated as to the OHAP. X. CLASSIFICATIONS OF PROPERTY. effects upon law of a mere mechanical improvement in land registration... | |
| Dwight Hinckley Olmstead - 1902 - 340 pàgines
...only by superficial minds but by strong and clear intellects. I am not sure that even such juridicial thinkers as Bentham and Austin are quite free from...may always be fitted. What I have stated as to the effect upon law of a mere mechanical improvement in land registration is a very impressive warning... | |
| Sir William Searle Holdsworth - 1938 - 326 pàgines
...the propositions of Euclid", Halevy, Growth of Philosophic Radicalism, 493-494. 3 "Bentham and Austin sometimes write as if they thought that, although...and to which a rational Code may always be fitted", Maine, Early Law and Custom, 360. He imitated Bentham in the truculence of his criticism of those who... | |
| United States. General Accounting Office - 1973 - 498 pàgines
...is not a herbarium in which we deposit law like dried plants," Lieber, Hermeneutics, 3d ed., p. 33. "Legal conceptions are indeed extremely stable; many...permanent legal conceptions which is discoverable by an eye looking through a dry light, and to which a rational code may always be fitted. What I have... | |
| Raymond Cocks - 1988 - 236 pàgines
...historical understanding of law. In general terms he ridiculed those who thought that somewhere there was 'a framework of permanent legal conceptions which...discoverable by a trained eye, looking through a dry light, to which a rational Code may always be fitted'. Maine now felt that he could call all science in support... | |
| Bhikhu C. Parekh - 1993 - 1112 pàgines
...the physical world.40 It is for this reason that, as Maine said,41 Bentham and his disciple Austin "sometimes write as if they thought that, although...and to which a rational Code may always be fitted." It was a common fallacy of the utilitarians, and the logical consequence of their philosophy, that... | |
| K. J. M. Smith - 2002 - 356 pàgines
...School of Law', Law Quarterly Review (1937), LIII, 330. 19. Maine suggested that 'Bentham and Austin sometimes write as if they thought that, although...and to which a rational Code may always be fitted.' Early Law and Custom (1883), p. 360. 20. Respectively Professors of Jurisprudence at University College... | |
| Wilfrid Rumble - 2004 - 282 pàgines
...permanent and indestructible', which is false. At least Maine argued that both of the utilitarians 'sometimes write as if they thought that, although...permanent legal conceptions which is discoverable by an eye looking through a dry light, and to which a rational code may always be fitted'.94 In addition,... | |
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