Legal science
Legal science is one of the main components in civil law tradition (after Roman law, canon law, commercial law, and the legacy of the revolutionary period).
Legal science is primarily the creation of German legal scholars of the middle and late nineteenth century, and it evolved naturally out of the ideas of Friedrich Carl von Savigny. Savigny argued that German codification should not follow the rationalist and secular natural law thinking that characterized the French codification but should be based on the principles of law that had historically been in force in Germany.{{interlanguage link|John H. Merryman|de|John Henry Merryman}} et al., The Civil Law Tradition: Europe, Latin America, and East Asia, Cases and Materials 481 (LexisNexis ed., 1994) (reprinted 2000). It is referred to as "Rechtswissenschaften" (plural) or "Rechtswissenschaft" (singular) in German.{{cite web |title=Duden "Rechtswissenschaft" |url=https://www.duden.de/rechtschreibung/Rechtswissenschaft |accessdate=17 January 2020 |ref=2}}
See also
References
Books
- Black's Law Dictionary, Abridged Seventh Edition, Bryan A. Garner
- Sabino Cassese, Recensione a J.H. Merryman, “The Italian Style, Doctrine, Law, Interpretation”, in “Stanford Law Review”, 1965–66, in “Rivista trimestrale di diritto pubblico”, 1966, n. 2, pp. 419–424.
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20070813083013/http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/lhr/17.3/schweber.html The "Science" of Legal Science: The Model of the Natural Sciences in Nineteenth-Century American Legal Education]
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