Law in Contemporary Society

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LukeReillyFirstEssay 8 - 03 Apr 2015 - Main.NicoGurian
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 I suppose in the end it all goes back to that ancient debate between Plato and Aristotle. Who do you trust more: philosopher-kings or politicians?

-- ShayBanerjee - 29 Mar 2015

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Building off what others have said, the one point I'm stuck on the fact that, despite what Judge Day would say, there really is no neutrality when a judge interprets case law. Just as a judge looking at statutory text might go to legislative history, a judge trying to interpret the applicability of case law to a given set of facts will inquire into the normative policy motivations of the cases and then figure out what matches her own motivations. A more practical note, how do you see this theory playing out in constitutional interpretation? This has the feeling of more of a Scala-like approach to statutory interpretation regime. If so, is there an alternative way to find the constitutional support for many of the rights we as a society consider fundamental today even though they do not appear in the text?

-- NicoGurian - 03 Apr 2015

 
 
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Revision 7r7 - 29 Mar 2015 - 23:55:41 - ShayBanerjee
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