When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gustav Radbruch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav_Radbruch

    Title page "Rechtsphilosophie" (1932) Radbruch's legal philosophy derived from neo-Kantianism, which assumes that a categorical cleavage exists between "is" (sein) and "ought" (sollen).

  3. Legal science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/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.

  4. Law and literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_and_literature

    [citation needed] The law and literature movement focuses on connections between law and literature. This field has roots in two developments in the intellectual history of law—first, the growing doubt about whether law in isolation is a source of value and meaning, or whether it must be plugged into a large cultural or philosophical or social-science context to give it value and meaning ...

  5. Crime and Punishment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_and_Punishment

    Crime and Punishment [a] is a novel by the Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky.It was first published in the literary journal The Russian Messenger in twelve monthly installments during 1866. [1]

  6. History of scientific method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_scientific_method

    The history of scientific method considers changes in the methodology of scientific inquiry, as distinct from the history of science itself. The development of rules for scientific reasoning has not been straightforward; scientific method has been the subject of intense and recurring debate throughout the history of science, and eminent natural philosophers and scientists have argued for the ...

  7. Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luhut_Binsar_Pandjaitan

    Luhut was born on 28 September 1947 in Simargala, a small hamlet in Toba, North Sumatra, as the eldest child and only son of the five children. [1] His father, Bonar Pandjaitan (died 1982), was a retired soldier who became a Sibualbuali bus driver and executive of Caltex Petroleum Corp in Indonesia and was sent to Cornell University in the United States. [2]

  8. Jalaluddin Rakhmat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jalaluddin_Rakhmat

    Jalaluddin Rakhmat, also known by the nickname of Kang Jalal, [1] (29 August 1949 – 15 February 2021) was an Indonesian academic and politician from the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle who became the member of the People's Representative Council from 2014 until 2019.

  9. Ethnography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnography

    The Roman historian Publius Cornelius Tacitus was a prolific ethnographer in antiquity. The term ethnography is from Greek (ἔθνος éthnos "folk, people, nation" and γράφω gráphō "I write") and encompasses the ways in which ancient authors described and analyzed foreign cultures.