Personal Collection

Total : 34,847 item

View |

1471. Reference : MM-1-21-28

Max Gluckman

| Moerman refers to the anthropologist Gluckman's work (1955) on aspects of the law, including 1) the reasons for legality, 2) regulations of the court, 3) standards of the decision and the facts of law, 4) actions and motivations, 5) ordinary crimes, 6) amity, 7) questioning, 8) the language of the law, 9) cross-examination, 10) designation, 11) judgment, 12) law and ethics, 13) investigation and 13) legal rights. | Punch card

1472. Reference : MM-1-21-30

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman's work (1963) on the limitations of judgment implications in the court, noting that the same judgment can produce different sentences in different cases. | Punch card

1473. Reference : MM-1-21-31

Karl Llewellyn

| Moerman refers to the jurisprudential scholar Karl Llewellyn' work (1960) on the issue of the foundations of decisions. He also refers to the work of Cross (1961) on the fundamental issues of justice, noting that justice has to be consistent and must follow a pattern. | Punch card

1474. Reference : MM-1-21-32

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman's work (1963) concerning judgments, noting that judges should be consistent in the sentences they hand down. | Punch card

1475. Reference : MM-1-21-33

Wetter

| Moerman refers to the work of Wetter (1960), who cites Llewellyn on the issue of sentencing as a legal norm. | Punch card

1476. Reference : MM-1-21-34

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman's work (1963) ‘Traité de l'Argumentation’, concerning the transformation of judgments into legal norms. | Punch card

1477. Reference : MM-1-21-35

Herbert Lionel Adolphus Hart and Tony Honoré

| Moerman refers to the work of the British lawyers Hart and Honoré (1959), who apply anthropological thought to common sense. | Punch card

1478. Reference : MM-1-21-36

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman’s assertion (1966) that speakers determine and influence the arguments used in communication. | Punch card

1479. Reference : MM-1-21-37

Perelman

| Moerman discusses an issue of interest in the ideas of Perelman, noting that the influence of audience attention can lead to the enthusiastic creation of meaning and the birth of discussion. | Punch card

1480. Reference : MM-1-21-38

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman's work (1968), in which it is noted that the exordium influences the later content of the orator. Moerman concludes that in the case of Kham, the opening of his speech determines his guilty verdict. | Punch card