Legal Theory Lexicon
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The Legal Theory Lexicon is a site I’ve been browsing through for a while now. Every week, Lawrence Solum takes a term from legal theory (the site is associated with the Legal Theory Blog) and summarizes it at an easy-to-understand level. Interesting stuff, and I would recommend it to any other 0Ls out there if they’ve ever wondered about the rule of law, originalism, textualism, or any of the other 40-some entries.
June 30th, 2005 at 2:33 pm
Are you really reading this for fun? More power to you.
First sentence:
“The dominant approaches to normative legal theory in the American legal academy converge on fairly robust role for the state and government subject to the constraints imposed by an equally robust set of individual rights.”
Too… many… syllables…
I think I’ll leave the lexicon-reading until school starts.
July 1st, 2005 at 11:57 am
Oh, I’m not really getting much from it, and I’m certainly not reading all of the entries, but I find some of it pretty interesting. Like the Originalism entry, for instance. I skipped over the parts I didn’t understand or didn’t care to think too much about, and I found out that originalism started out emphasizing the original intentions of the framers, but now, supposedly because of Scalia, it focuses on the meaning the constitution would have had to people of the late 1700s.
I like random facts.