Search for: "Robert S Kant" Results 1 - 20 of 101
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
6 Apr 2012, 3:00 pm by Lawrence Solum
Robert Paul Wolff has begun a multipart tutorial on Kant's Ethical Theory at The Philosopher's Stone. [read post]
30 Mar 2015, 7:25 am
A while ago, I wrote about Adam Liptak's criticism of law reviews, and argued that Liptak's criticism lacked novelty. [read post]
20 Dec 2022, 5:06 am by Andrew Koppelman
Robert Nozick’s Anarchy, State, and Utopia (1974) is the most important scholarly work of libertarian philosophy. [read post]
1 Sep 2016, 4:59 am by Brian Leiter
...with the first of a series of lectures on Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. [read post]
11 Apr 2008, 5:14 am
Zalta Kant's Moral Philosophy by Robert Johnson Causal Determinism by Carl Hoefer [read post]
3 Jan 2015, 9:29 am by Patricia W. Moore
Chief Justice John Roberts once suggested that legal scholarship was not helpful to the bar, inventing a humorous parody of a law review article about "the influence of Immanuel Kant on evidentiary approaches in 18th Century Bulgaria. [read post]
11 Jul 2011, 8:21 am by Stephanie Ziegler
(C-SPAN's video coverage here.)Roberts said:Pick up a copy of any law review that you see, and the first article is likely to be, you know, the influence of Immanuel Kant on evidentiary [read post]
18 Mar 2015, 2:54 am by SHG
This isn’t to say that law review articles are inherently worthless, unilluminating or limited to screeds about Kant. [read post]
2 Apr 2019, 3:30 am by Kristin Hickman
” Legal scholars were unimpressed, to say the least, by Chief Justice Robertss flippant dismissal of their work. [read post]
4 Nov 2013, 10:00 am by Will Baude
(Will Baude) Remember all of the recent discussion about the uselessness of law review articles, and the way nay-sayers like to invoke Chief Justice Robertss remark about “the influence of Immanuel Kant on evidentiary approaches in 18th-century Bulgaria”? [read post]
23 Jul 2011, 8:07 am by Jonathan H. Adler
Adler) CQ’s Kenneth Jost assesses “Chief Justice Roberts’ Ill-Informed Attack on Legal Scholarship” on his blog. [read post]
21 May 2014, 10:04 am
Roberts, British national interest in the Gulf: rediscovering a role? [read post]
30 Jan 2013, 11:52 pm by Patrick S. O'Donnell
The latter contrasts the author’s reliance on a line of ideas that runs through Locke, Kant, and Rawls with an alternative... [read post]
21 Mar 2015, 1:24 pm
 Speaking at a judicial conference, Roberts said: Pick up a copy of any law review that you see, and the first article is likely to be, you know, the influence of Immanuel Kant on evidentiary approaches in 18th Century Bulgaria, or something. [read post]
20 Apr 2013, 6:20 am by David Friedman
One of the other participants was Robert Wolff, who published his In Defense of Anarchism a year or two before I published my Machinery of Freedom. [read post]
9 Apr 2023, 4:58 pm by Jacob Katz Cogan
Contents include: Marc de Wilde, Allying with Unbelievers: Hugo Grotius’s Letters to East-Indian Rulers Adam Strobeyko, The Person of the State: The Anthropomorphic Subject of the Law of Nations Christopher Szabla, Civilising Violence: International Law and Colonial War in the British Empire, 1850–1900 Robert Schütze, German Idealism after Kant: Nineteenth-Century Foundations of International Law Book Reviews – Symposium on Symposium on… [read post]