COMMON LAW.Holmes, Oliver WendellItem #: 2354 Pages: xvi, 422p. Published: Union; Lawbook Exchange, Ltd.; 2004. Subjects: COMPARATIVE LAW, LEGAL HISTORY, POLITICAL SCIENCE, PSYCHOLOGY/SOCIOLOGY This landmark work, which according to Winfield, "blew fresh air into lawyer's minds encrusted with Blackstone and Kent,"was a decisive influence on sociological jurisdiction, legal realism and the general development of American law in the twentieth century. Winfield, Chief Sources of Anglo-American Law 38. Rejecting the reigning positivist ethos ofthe nineteenth century, Holmes proposed that the law was nota science founded on abstract universal principles but a body of practices that responded to particular situations.This functionalist interpretation led to his radical conclusion that law was not discovered, but invented. This theme is announced in the famous quote at the beginning of Lecture I: "The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience" (1). Reprinted by The Lawbook Exchange,Ltd. Distributed by William S. Hein & Co., Inc. Please contact us to request purchasing information. |