ChristopherBuerger-FirstPaper 8 - 26 Feb 2008 - Main.EbenMoglen
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Two Ideas, One Mind: The Challenge of Legal Thinking | | This is in no way to suggest that a lawyer should be a moderate on all or even any issues. It is simply to emphasize that when lawyers do take a strong stand, they need to understand why they are doing so, and why someone else in their position might not. Good lawyers will understand the conditions that they base their position off, the conditions that are still unknown or contested, and the possible change in conditions that could shift their views. This kind of freethinking and mental flexibility is only possible when one is willing not just to entertain, but completely hold an opposite viewpoint alongside their own.
Subsection B: Bringing opponents together: The work of a lawyer | |
> > | | | The most important way that this kind of thinking can help a lawyer is by aiding in his or her attempt to bring people together. As first year students, we have already heard many times that when a case goes to litigation, the lawyers have, in some sense, already lost. A good lawyer will not just find opposing ideas and knock them down. Surely this is a useful skill to command. A more useful one, however, is to find opposing parties and bring them together in a peaceful way, to take two opposing ideas, hold them in one's mind, and reconcile them in a way such that a compromise can exist. The greatest hope I have for the practice of law is that it holds a promise, a promise that there is still a chance for human beings to resolve their disagreements civilly and peacefully without resorting to a show of brute force. To accomplish this hope, it is imperative that a lawyer understand not one, but at least two opposite ideas in every conflict. | |
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- AmandaHungerford originally recommended Steve Gould's Mismeasure of Man, which is indeed well worth reading. That history of the attempts to measure "intelligence," which have caused far more harm than benefit, is directly relevant only to your opening comment. The notion of "intelligences," or structures of mental action appropriate to particular genres of complex behavior, is fundamentally different, as you say.
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< < | You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.
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- A very pretty essay. Fitzgerald suckered you with an epigram, so you dichotomized what would have been better left in the condition of mere multiplicity, as your conclusion only at the last agonizing moment seems to wise up to. Only the lawyer engaged in pure bilateral confrontation can be content to hold only two viewpoints. Most social understanding calls for an ecological approach, in which a multiplicity of positions exist that could be inhabited as subject, and whose consciousness and behavior can be understood as a "stack" of knowledges, from the biochemical basement to the attic of philosophy. A legislative leader ideally holds as many potentially conflicting mental models as there are legislators in her chamber; a "lawyer for the situation" in the Brandeisian mold must be able to perceive the situation from all the inhabited viewpoints. Each model or viewpoint superimposes individual and social understandings: from what we know about psyche to what we know about organization. Each also interacts with the others, as characters do in an imagined work of literary narrative. Some of the material is "known" as scientific facts are known, but much of the material is "felt" or "intuited," and cannot easily be described in reductive terms.
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< < | If you ever get a chance, I highly, highly recommend you read Stephen Jay Gould's Mismeasure of a Man. I'm not sure how directly it relates to your paper, and in any case you won't have time to read it before Thursday. But if you ever have some free time, it's a great book on intelligence, and I think you'd like it. | > > |
- You could edit this text to give full reach to the principle, and to remove some infelicities. Little else can be done to improve on it.
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ChristopherBuerger-FirstPaper 7 - 14 Feb 2008 - Main.ChristopherBuerger
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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper%25" |
Two Ideas, One Mind: The Challenge of Legal Thinking
-- By ChristopherBuerger - 09 Feb 2008 | |
< < | *Still in Rough Draft Form* | > > | | | Introduction | |
< < | Most of us grew up during a time in which society's views on intelligence were completely redefined. Standardized tests were called into question, and and researchers (perhaps most notably: Howard Gardner]]) started to speak of different kinds of intelligence. But as budding lawyers, what kind of intelligence are we seeking? The different messages we are receiving as first year law students point me to a specific test for intelligence that, if rudimentary, is perhaps the most useful to think of as we approach both specific legal problems as well as ideas of how to shape our future careers. This "test" was thought of not by psychologists, but a novelist, and it is not part of the modern redefinition of cognitive ability, but was rather asserted over 70 years ago. It was F. Scott Fitzgerald who is credited with saying, "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function." Fitzgerald's idea of intelligence is a major part of effective lawyering in the short term and also in the long term. | > > | Most of us grew up during a time when intelligence was completely redefined. Standardized tests were questioned, and researchers spoke of different "kinds" of intelligence. But as budding lawyers, what kind of intelligence do we seek? The different messages we are receiving point me to a specific measure that, if rudimentary, is especially useful to think about as we approach our future careers. This "test" was thought of not by psychologists, but a novelist, and it is not part of the modern redefinition of cognitive ability, but was stated decades ago. F. Scott Fitzgerald is credited with saying, "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function." Fitzgerald's idea of intelligence plays a major part of effective lawyering not just in the short term, but in the long term as well. | | Section I- The importance of holding opposing ideas for effective lawyering in the short term
Subsection A: Good arguments, Legal Realism, and the malleability of law | |
< < | Good lawyers supposedly make good arguments. These arguments become even more critical when we take into account the malleability of the court. Arguments of predisposition of jurors aside, we have come to point in legal studies, that nearly everyone admits the impossibility for objective and universally agreed upon legal decisions. Whether it is Holmes saying, “You can give any conclusion a logical form” or Frank reminding us that “the facts [in a trial]… are not objective” or even Cohen decrying the circular logic that courts use in defining terms like value or due process, it seems that courts will decide as they wish. The most effective lawyer in these instances will be able to convince the court that they “wish” to decide in his or her favor. | > > | Good lawyers make good arguments. These arguments become especially critical when we accept the malleability of the court. Predispositions of jurors aside, we have come to a point in legal studies where nearly everyone admits the impossibility for objective or universally agreed upon legal doctrines. Whether it is Holmes saying, “You can give any conclusion a logical form” or Frank reminding us that “the facts [in a trial]… are not objective” or even Cohen decrying the circular logic that courts use, it seems that courts will decide as they wish. The most effective lawyer in these instances will be able to convince the court that they “wish” to decide in his or her favor. | | Subsection B: The importance of understanding opposing arguments | |
< < | Building a strong argument is not enough. Lawyers must work beyond the ideas of their client and the arguments that strengthen their position. They must take into account the other side. They must imagine what the skeptical judge or juror is thinking and anticipate what the opposing counsel will contend. This imagination, however, must go beyond the point of anticipation. The effective lawyer cannot simply make an argument that is persuasive to a party that does not wish to be persuaded. The effective lawyer will see not just what, but why. Why does the judge hold that view? What is the motivation for it? The best lawyer holds not just the client’s ideas, but must simultaneous hold and share the view of anyone that might not yet be convinced. And doing so, the lawyer must still be able to properly function. | > > | Building a strong argument is not enough. Lawyers must work beyond the ideas of their client and the arguments that strengthen their position. They must take into account the other side. They must imagine what the skeptical judge or juror is thinking and anticipate what the opposing counsel will contend. This imagination, however, must go beyond the point of anticipation. The effective lawyer will see not just the "what" of the opposing ideas, but also the "why." Why does the judge hold that view? What is the motivation for it? What are the assumptions he is basing it on? Which assumptions is he willing to change and which ones are too strongly ingrained. The best lawyer holds not just the client’s ideas, but simultaneously holds and shares the view those not yet be convinced. | | Section II- The importance of holding opposing ideas for effective lawyering in the long term | |
< < | The above point may be the clearest way a lawyer can utilize Fitzgerald’s idea of intelligence, but it is not the most interesting or the most important way. First, we must recognize that lawyers have a greater responsibility than winning cases. Lawyers have a unique ability to shape the world with their words, to move social forces in different directions. And if it’s true, as Holmes suggests when he quotes Hegel, that it is the “opinion,” and not the “appetite,” that must be satisfied, then a lawyer’s success cannot be measured by salary or litigation wins or contracts formed. Rather, success will be measured by the impact a lawyer has in shaping the world, on shifting policy, social beliefs, and individual actions. | > > | The above point may be the clearest way a lawyer can utilize Fitzgerald’s idea of intelligence, but it is not the most interesting or the most important way. First, lawyers have a greater responsibility than simply winning cases. They have a unique ability to shape the world with words, to move social forces. And if it’s true, as Holmes suggests when he quotes Hegel, that it is the “opinion,” and not the “appetite,” that must be satisfied, then a lawyer’s success cannot be measured by salary or litigation wins. Rather, success is measured by the impact a lawyer has in shaping the world, on shifting policy, social beliefs, and individual actions. | | Subsection A: Trying to understand, keeping an open mind | |
< < | The lawyer's ability to function with two opposed ideas in his or her head simultaneously is most critical when dealing with these measures of success. Any lawyer working for a cause will meet opposition. Rather than immediately attempt to defeat the opposition at any cost, a good lawyer will ask why the opposition exists. Is the opposite view simply fueled by greed or bigotry? Or, is there another side represented by otherwise reasonable individuals who simply ascribe to a different worldview? In the latter situation, a lawyer must think of the source for this distinct vision of the world. What are the facts that someone else has seen, the experiences that someone else brings to the table? A lawyer working for change must simultaneously see the positives that he or she imagines and the negatives that his or her opponents fear. | > > | The lawyer's ability to function with two opposed ideas is most critical when dealing with these measures of success. Any lawyer working for a cause will meet opposition. Rather than immediately defeat the opposition at any cost, a good lawyer will ask why the opposition exists. Is the opposite view simply fueled by greed or bigotry? Or, is there another side represented by otherwise reasonable individuals? In the latter situation, a lawyer must imagine the source for this distinct vision of the world. What are the facts that someone else sees, the experiences that they bring to the table? A lawyer working for change must simultaneously see the positives of a goal mirrored by the negatives that his or her opponents fear. | | | |
< < | This is in no way to suggest that a lawyer should be a moderate on all issues. It is simply to emphasize that when lawyers do take a strong stand that they understand why they are doing so, and why someone else in their position might not. Good lawyers will understand the conditions that they base their position off, the conditions that are still unknown, and the possible change in conditions that could shift their views. This kind of freethinking and mental flexibility is only possible when one is willing not just to entertain, but completely hold an opposite viewpoint within their mind. | > > | This is in no way to suggest that a lawyer should be a moderate on all or even any issues. It is simply to emphasize that when lawyers do take a strong stand, they need to understand why they are doing so, and why someone else in their position might not. Good lawyers will understand the conditions that they base their position off, the conditions that are still unknown or contested, and the possible change in conditions that could shift their views. This kind of freethinking and mental flexibility is only possible when one is willing not just to entertain, but completely hold an opposite viewpoint alongside their own. | | Subsection B: Bringing opponents together: The work of a lawyer | |
< < | The most important way that this kind of thinking can help a lawyer is by aiding in his or her attempt to bring people together. As first year students, we have already heard time and time again that when a case goes to litigation, the lawyers have, in some sense, already lost. A good lawyer will not just find opposing ideas and knock them down. Surely this is a useful skill to command. A more useful one, however, is to find opposing parties and bring them together in a peaceful way, to take two opposing ideas, hold them in one's mind, and reconcile them in a way such that the compromise could be agreeable to two feuding sides. The greatest hope I have for the practice of law is that it holds a promise, a promise that there is still a chance for human beings to resolve their disagreements civilly and peacefully without resorting to show of brute force. | > > | The most important way that this kind of thinking can help a lawyer is by aiding in his or her attempt to bring people together. As first year students, we have already heard many times that when a case goes to litigation, the lawyers have, in some sense, already lost. A good lawyer will not just find opposing ideas and knock them down. Surely this is a useful skill to command. A more useful one, however, is to find opposing parties and bring them together in a peaceful way, to take two opposing ideas, hold them in one's mind, and reconcile them in a way such that a compromise can exist. The greatest hope I have for the practice of law is that it holds a promise, a promise that there is still a chance for human beings to resolve their disagreements civilly and peacefully without resorting to a show of brute force. To accomplish this hope, it is imperative that a lawyer understand not one, but at least two opposite ideas in every conflict. | |
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ChristopherBuerger-FirstPaper 6 - 14 Feb 2008 - Main.ChristopherBuerger
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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper%25" |
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< < | Initial Notes:
Fitzgerald's measure of intelligence;;
Uncertainty as key to lawyering vs. Righteousness as a requisite for justice;;
Walter Payton's idea of role models and influences;;
Revolution as only hope vs. Revolution as perpetual misery;;
Role of lawyers in society. (One of) the Most powerful profession(s)?;;
Ancient Hawaiians and culture of recreation. Life based on "the dance" and surfing? Recreation as the highest order of man?;;
Disagreeing with Yourself and Legal Intelligence | > > | Two Ideas, One Mind: The Challenge of Legal Thinking | | -- By ChristopherBuerger - 09 Feb 2008 | |
< < | | > > | *Still in Rough Draft Form* | | Introduction | |
< < | Most of us grew up during a time in which society's views on intelligence were completely redefined. Standardized tests were called into question, and and researchers (perhaps most notably: Howard Gardner]]) started to speak of different kinds of intelligence. But as budding lawyers, what kind of intelligence are we seeking? The different messages we are receiving as first year law students point me to a specific test for intelligence that, if rudimentary, is perhaps useful to think of as we approach both specific legal problems as well as ideas of how to shape our future careers. This "test" was thought of not by psychologist, but novelist, and it is not part of the modern redefinition of cognitive ability, but was rather asserted over 70 years ago. It was F. Scott Fitzgerald who is credited with saying, "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function." It is the thesis of this paper that Fitzgerald's idea of intelligence is a major part of effective lawyering in the short term and also in the long term. | > > | Most of us grew up during a time in which society's views on intelligence were completely redefined. Standardized tests were called into question, and and researchers (perhaps most notably: Howard Gardner]]) started to speak of different kinds of intelligence. But as budding lawyers, what kind of intelligence are we seeking? The different messages we are receiving as first year law students point me to a specific test for intelligence that, if rudimentary, is perhaps the most useful to think of as we approach both specific legal problems as well as ideas of how to shape our future careers. This "test" was thought of not by psychologists, but a novelist, and it is not part of the modern redefinition of cognitive ability, but was rather asserted over 70 years ago. It was F. Scott Fitzgerald who is credited with saying, "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function." Fitzgerald's idea of intelligence is a major part of effective lawyering in the short term and also in the long term. | | Section I- The importance of holding opposing ideas for effective lawyering in the short term | |
< < | Subsection A Relating Legal Realism, Holmes, and the malleability of law | > > | Subsection A: Good arguments, Legal Realism, and the malleability of law
Good lawyers supposedly make good arguments. These arguments become even more critical when we take into account the malleability of the court. Arguments of predisposition of jurors aside, we have come to point in legal studies, that nearly everyone admits the impossibility for objective and universally agreed upon legal decisions. Whether it is Holmes saying, “You can give any conclusion a logical form” or Frank reminding us that “the facts [in a trial]… are not objective” or even Cohen decrying the circular logic that courts use in defining terms like value or due process, it seems that courts will decide as they wish. The most effective lawyer in these instances will be able to convince the court that they “wish” to decide in his or her favor.
Subsection B: The importance of understanding opposing arguments
Building a strong argument is not enough. Lawyers must work beyond the ideas of their client and the arguments that strengthen their position. They must take into account the other side. They must imagine what the skeptical judge or juror is thinking and anticipate what the opposing counsel will contend. This imagination, however, must go beyond the point of anticipation. The effective lawyer cannot simply make an argument that is persuasive to a party that does not wish to be persuaded. The effective lawyer will see not just what, but why. Why does the judge hold that view? What is the motivation for it? The best lawyer holds not just the client’s ideas, but must simultaneous hold and share the view of anyone that might not yet be convinced. And doing so, the lawyer must still be able to properly function. | | | |
< < | Subsection B Understanding the importance of opposite counsel | > > | Section II- The importance of holding opposing ideas for effective lawyering in the long term
The above point may be the clearest way a lawyer can utilize Fitzgerald’s idea of intelligence, but it is not the most interesting or the most important way. First, we must recognize that lawyers have a greater responsibility than winning cases. Lawyers have a unique ability to shape the world with their words, to move social forces in different directions. And if it’s true, as Holmes suggests when he quotes Hegel, that it is the “opinion,” and not the “appetite,” that must be satisfied, then a lawyer’s success cannot be measured by salary or litigation wins or contracts formed. Rather, success will be measured by the impact a lawyer has in shaping the world, on shifting policy, social beliefs, and individual actions. | | | |
< < | Section II The importance of holding opposing ideas for effective lawyering in the long term | > > | Subsection A: Trying to understand, keeping an open mind
The lawyer's ability to function with two opposed ideas in his or her head simultaneously is most critical when dealing with these measures of success. Any lawyer working for a cause will meet opposition. Rather than immediately attempt to defeat the opposition at any cost, a good lawyer will ask why the opposition exists. Is the opposite view simply fueled by greed or bigotry? Or, is there another side represented by otherwise reasonable individuals who simply ascribe to a different worldview? In the latter situation, a lawyer must think of the source for this distinct vision of the world. What are the facts that someone else has seen, the experiences that someone else brings to the table? A lawyer working for change must simultaneously see the positives that he or she imagines and the negatives that his or her opponents fear. | | | |
< < | Subsection A Understanding long term reactions | > > | This is in no way to suggest that a lawyer should be a moderate on all issues. It is simply to emphasize that when lawyers do take a strong stand that they understand why they are doing so, and why someone else in their position might not. Good lawyers will understand the conditions that they base their position off, the conditions that are still unknown, and the possible change in conditions that could shift their views. This kind of freethinking and mental flexibility is only possible when one is willing not just to entertain, but completely hold an opposite viewpoint within their mind. | | | |
< < | Subsection B Humility and uncertainty as a key to success | > > | Subsection B: Bringing opponents together: The work of a lawyer
The most important way that this kind of thinking can help a lawyer is by aiding in his or her attempt to bring people together. As first year students, we have already heard time and time again that when a case goes to litigation, the lawyers have, in some sense, already lost. A good lawyer will not just find opposing ideas and knock them down. Surely this is a useful skill to command. A more useful one, however, is to find opposing parties and bring them together in a peaceful way, to take two opposing ideas, hold them in one's mind, and reconcile them in a way such that the compromise could be agreeable to two feuding sides. The greatest hope I have for the practice of law is that it holds a promise, a promise that there is still a chance for human beings to resolve their disagreements civilly and peacefully without resorting to show of brute force. | |
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ChristopherBuerger-FirstPaper 4 - 12 Feb 2008 - Main.AmandaHungerford
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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper%25" |
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< < | | | Initial Notes:
Fitzgerald's measure of intelligence;;
Uncertainty as key to lawyering vs. Righteousness as a requisite for justice;; | | # * Set ALLOWTOPICVIEW = TWikiAdminGroup, ChristopherBuerger
Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of that line. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated list
\ No newline at end of file | |
> > |
If you ever get a chance, I highly, highly recommend you read Stephen Jay Gould's Mismeasure of a Man. I'm not sure how directly it relates to your paper, and in any case you won't have time to read it before Thursday. But if you ever have some free time, it's a great book on intelligence, and I think you'd like it. | | \ No newline at end of file |
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ChristopherBuerger-FirstPaper 3 - 12 Feb 2008 - Main.ChristopherBuerger
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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper%25" |
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< < | It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted. | | Initial Notes:
Fitzgerald's measure of intelligence;; | | -- By ChristopherBuerger - 09 Feb 2008 | |
< < | Intro- F. Scott's Fitzgerald's quote on intelligence and its application to legal thinking | > > | Introduction
Most of us grew up during a time in which society's views on intelligence were completely redefined. Standardized tests were called into question, and and researchers (perhaps most notably: Howard Gardner]]) started to speak of different kinds of intelligence. But as budding lawyers, what kind of intelligence are we seeking? The different messages we are receiving as first year law students point me to a specific test for intelligence that, if rudimentary, is perhaps useful to think of as we approach both specific legal problems as well as ideas of how to shape our future careers. This "test" was thought of not by psychologist, but novelist, and it is not part of the modern redefinition of cognitive ability, but was rather asserted over 70 years ago. It was F. Scott Fitzgerald who is credited with saying, "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function." It is the thesis of this paper that Fitzgerald's idea of intelligence is a major part of effective lawyering in the short term and also in the long term. | | Section I- The importance of holding opposing ideas for effective lawyering in the short term
Subsection A Relating Legal Realism, Holmes, and the malleability of law |
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ChristopherBuerger-FirstPaper 2 - 11 Feb 2008 - Main.ChristopherBuerger
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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper%25" |
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted. | | Ancient Hawaiians and culture of recreation. Life based on "the dance" and surfing? Recreation as the highest order of man?;; | |
< < | Paper Title | > > | Disagreeing with Yourself and Legal Intelligence | | -- By ChristopherBuerger - 09 Feb 2008 | |
> > | Intro- F. Scott's Fitzgerald's quote on intelligence and its application to legal thinking
Section I- The importance of holding opposing ideas for effective lawyering in the short term | | | |
< < | Section I | > > | Subsection A Relating Legal Realism, Holmes, and the malleability of law | | | |
< < | Subsection A | > > | Subsection B Understanding the importance of opposite counsel | | | |
> > | Section II The importance of holding opposing ideas for effective lawyering in the long term | | | |
< < | Subsub 1 | > > | Subsection A Understanding long term reactions | | | |
< < | Subsection B
Subsub 1
Subsub 2
Section II
Subsection A
Subsection B | > > | Subsection B Humility and uncertainty as a key to success | |
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ChristopherBuerger-FirstPaper 1 - 09 Feb 2008 - Main.ChristopherBuerger
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> > |
META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper%25" |
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.
Initial Notes:
Fitzgerald's measure of intelligence;;
Uncertainty as key to lawyering vs. Righteousness as a requisite for justice;;
Walter Payton's idea of role models and influences;;
Revolution as only hope vs. Revolution as perpetual misery;;
Role of lawyers in society. (One of) the Most powerful profession(s)?;;
Ancient Hawaiians and culture of recreation. Life based on "the dance" and surfing? Recreation as the highest order of man?;;
Paper Title
-- By ChristopherBuerger - 09 Feb 2008
Section I
Subsection A
Subsub 1
Subsection B
Subsub 1
Subsub 2
Section II
Subsection A
Subsection B
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