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29 Apr 2022, 6:53 am
  Just as the technologies of ancient food markets in medieval Europe produced the architecture of the medieval city and the physical locations of economy, Church and state, so platforms provide a distinctive architecture with its own relations to politics and norms. [read post]
24 Apr 2022, 10:43 am by Lawrence Solum
Natural Law Theory Natural law theory is strongly associated with classical and medieval thought, especially Aristotle, Roman jurisprudence, and St. [read post]
21 Apr 2022, 7:30 am by Guest Blogger
  I am reminded, from my time in graduate school at the University of Chicago, of one of the great (at the time, rather gendered) compliments that I heard stated of another scholar: “This is a man who reads. [read post]
13 Apr 2022, 5:36 pm
These rules variously (according to the several differing schools of natural-law and natural-rights speculation) are derived from divine commandment; from the nature of humankind; from abstract Reason; or from long experience of mankind in community.[2]   At the same time, the idealized forms of meaning, and of rationalizing the world (the systems of baseline premises around which it is possible to build collective meaning) is essential for the construction of the rule-law systems on… [read post]
9 Apr 2022, 6:01 pm by Robert George
Ventoux”; Vergerio, De in genius moribus (1472) February 16 -- The Victorian Model of Learning – The medieval universities evolved in the 19th century into models of research, especially in Germany. [read post]
4 Apr 2022, 8:24 pm by Simmons Hanly Conroy
We’ll start in ancient times, then move forward to explore how successive cultures made use of this mineral. [read post]
2 Apr 2022, 8:15 am
  Such efforts have been rewarded at times by equally powerful countering systems of rationalization. [read post]
1 Apr 2022, 7:03 am by Dan Lopez
So, while we often say we’re like women in a medieval court, we don’t have subpoena power, but we are whispering in the ears of people with power. [read post]
31 Mar 2022, 12:30 am by David Pocklington
At the time of the deceased’s death, the family was unaware that burial on private land was possible, and indicated that had they known at the time, they would have had the deceased buried on the farm. [read post]
2 Mar 2022, 5:06 pm by Greg Lambert and Marlene Gebauer
Sarah Sutherland from CanLII joins us this week to talk about her new book, Legal Data and Information in Practice: How Data and the Law Interact. [read post]
12 Feb 2022, 10:19 pm by Florian Mueller
" Alternatively, one can also liken this structural problem--as I did in a Korea Times op-ed last year--to medieval feudalism. [read post]
8 Feb 2022, 5:32 am by Nathan Dorn
In that book, he advised that the it was illegal, and, echoing medieval critics, that its use amounted to an impious attempt to demand a miracle from God. [read post]
2 Feb 2022, 7:15 am by Jay Knispel
Over time, the term has become a representation of that privilege. [read post]
25 Jan 2022, 1:17 am by Neil Wilkof
” For Benjamin, the aura of a work of art in its primal sense was integrated within the practice of ritual, such as a fresco on the wall of a medieval church. [read post]
22 Jan 2022, 9:30 pm by ernst
Written by an international team of scholars, it explores, in non-technical language, how it operated in the daily life of people and in the great political events of the time. [read post]
20 Jan 2022, 9:30 pm by ernst
Tracking its origins to medieval times and the English common law, the book shows how “private prosecutors” were once a mainstay of early American criminal procedure. [read post]
20 Jan 2022, 5:29 am by Stephen Mayeaux
And among those documents, a 13-line public statement in 1656 by the Hospital of the Holy Cross in Barcelona on “the admission or not of spurious or bastards [orphans and children born out of wedlock] in the Hospital” stood out, not only because I walk by the hospital’s medieval building on a daily basis, but also because of the statement’s weirdly familiar tone and its modern way of handling a “call out” situation. [read post]
18 Jan 2022, 6:14 am by ernst
Scholarship has shown that "modern" ideas regarding commerce and "economics" had their roots in late-medieval Catholic thought and in neo-scholastic ideas that blended theology, justice, and law. [read post]
11 Jan 2022, 12:03 pm by Nathan Dorn
In that time, the national scope of these operations and the strict formulaic contents of the writs became the basis of the medieval common law, a body of law that was common to the king’s courts throughout England. [read post]