Year 1958-1961

Scope and content :

1958-1961. The first field work trip of Moerman in Thailand. He spent almost 3 years to collected field data about the Lue society, tradition, culture, and daily life of Tai Lue community at Ban Phaed, Payao province. 3295 records of slide, photograph, punch card, letter, notebook, typescript, and map.

Repository : SAC

Extent and medium : 3295 records of slide, photograph, punch card, letter, notebook, typescript, and map.

Immediate source of acquisition or transfer : Donated by Michael Moerman, 2005.

System of arrangemant : The series is divided base on the periods of field work in Thailand.

Condition governing accessible and reproduce : Some restriction on access. To respect in intellectual property right, the original material (hard copy) may not allowed to access. Please contact staff if you need more information.

Creative Commons License : Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (CC BY-NC-ND)

Traditional Knowledge License : Traditional Knowledge Attribution Non-Commercial (TK A-NC)

Language : English/Thai

Script : English/Thai

Rule or convention : Collection, series and file level description based on ISAD(G)

631. Reference : MM-1-21-68

Mellinkoff

| Moerman refers to Mellinkoff’s work (1963), on the language of the law. Words are interpreted according to usage, depending on the context | Punch card

Mellinkoff

632. Reference : MM-1-21-69

Mellinkoff

| Moerman looks at Mellinkoff’s work (1963), which refers to writing about 'The mystery of Seisin’; the conveyancing of land from owner to heir in the feudal era. | Punch card

Mellinkoff

633. Reference : MM-1-21-70

Perelman

| Moerman refer’s to Perelman’s work (1968) on the difference between appearance and reality. While such differentiation can provide clarification of what is involved, they are not the same thing as means and end, appearance and reality, body and soul. | Punch card

Perelman

634. Reference : MM-1-21-71

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman’s work (1963) on decisive judgments by the court. Judges, he notes, are unlike scientists in that the latter can determine the cause on which to base their conclusions. Judges cannot do this, instead having to find a conclusion within a given time frame, and the judgment will be affected by those involved in the implementation. | Punch card

Perelman

635. Reference : MM-1-21-72

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman’s work (1963) on the similarity between the explanation of a phenomenon and the justification of the action. Actions and phenomena are similar in that the explanation and the justification rely on theoretical law and common rules. | Punch card

Perelman

636. Reference : MM-1-21-73

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman’s work (1963), in which he notes that arguments in a formal situation in some societies are limited, as only a certain number of people have the status to be able to argue. This compares to dialogue or discussion in daily life, on which there are fewer restrictions. In some situations, the limits of the argument depend on the duration, subjects and other third parties involved. | Punch card

Perelman

637. Reference : MM-1-21-74

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman’s work (1968) on the importance of that which happened previously and that which happens subsequently. Using the field of sociology as an example, he notes that the period before and after Max Weber has historical significance. | Punch card

Perelman

638. Reference : MM-1-21-75

Perelman

| Moerman refers to Perelman’s work (1968) in which he notes that membership is a form of classification, and that such identification influences action, i.e. the activity boundary. | Punch card

Perelman

639. Reference : MM-1-21-76

Corax

| Moerman refers to the work of Corax Man, which looks at Aristotle’s Rhetoric. He notes that weak people plead not guilty if they do not recognize that an assault has occurred, and even if they do plead guilty, the public will believe them to be innocent, believing them to be incapable of committing the crime. | Punch card

Corax

640. Reference : MM-1-21-77

Llewellyn

| Moerman refers to Llewellyn’s (1960) assertion that an opinion is an argument whose components are determined by memory. | Punch card

Llewellyn