03441nam 22005053 450 991036763870332120250905110038.00-8248-8382-9(CKB)4100000010105024(MiAaPQ)EBC32223086(Au-PeEL)EBL32223086(OCoLC)1229496686(ODN)ODN0011420227(EXLCZ)99410000001010502420250807d1975 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierHuman Jurisprudence Public Law As Political Science1st ed.Honolulu :University of Hawaii Press,1975.©1975.1 online resource (421 pages)0-8248-0294-2 Intro -- Human Jurisprudence -- Human Jurisprudence -- Contents -- Figures -- Tables -- Foreword -- PrefacePOTHESES -- V. CONCLUSION -- Opinion Agreement.I. OPINION AGREEMENT -- II. ATTRIBUTES -- III. PARTICIPATION -- IV. CORRELATIONS AMONG ATTRIBUTES, PARTICIPATION,  AND OPINION AGREEMENT -- V. APPENDIX -- Coding Rules for Interagreement in Opinions -- Comment on "Opinion Agreement among High Court Justices" -- Quantifying Political Ideology -- Ideologies and Attitudes -- I. THE CRITICAL FUNCTION -- II. ACADEMIC IDEOLOGIES -- III. ACADEMIC ATTITUDES -- 1. Concepts -- 2. Logic -- 3. Statistical Literacy -- 4. Rationality -- 5. Empiricism -- 6. Methodology and Scientism -- IV. JUDICIAL IDEOLOGIES -- V. JUDICIAL ATTITUDES -- 1. Consistency -- 2. Intensity -- 3. Modality -- VI. THE FUNCTION OF CRITICISM -- Academic Ideology -- I. THE HYPOTHESIS -- II. THE RESEARCH DESIGN -- A. Theory -- B. Procedures -- C. Data -- III. THE SOCIOMETRIC RANKINGS -- A. The Correlation Matrices -- B. Factor Analysis -- C. Interpretation -- D. Smallest Space Analysis -- IV. THREE VIEWPOINTS OF THE IDEOLOGICAL STRUCTURE -- V. CONCORDANCE AND IDEOLOGICAL AFFINITY -- A. Concordance -- B. Classifying the Nonrespondents -- VI. SUMMARY -- APPENDIX A -- APPENDIX B -- Ideological Distance -- I. THE SURVEY INSTRUMENTS -- II. THE CORRELATION MATRICES -- III. THE SMALLEST SPACES -- IV. THE COMPOSITE SPACE -- V. CONCLUSIONS -- Toward a Dynamic Jurisprudence of Human Behavior -- A. Racial Equality -- B. Representational Equality -- C. Procedural Equality -- IV. A PROPOSAL FOR CIVIL DISARMAMENT -- Future Stress -- Justice and Reasoning -- I. AN EMPIRICAL MODEL OF JUDICIAL REASONING -- II. SOME EXAMPLES OF EMPIRICAL RESEARCH INTO  JUDICIAL REASONING -- Cases Cited -- Bibliography -- Publications by the Author -- Index -- About the Author.This book provides a rare view of a creative scholar at work during a highly productive phase of his career.It shows him as an innovator, theorist, methodologist, "missionary," critic, and scientist, but he remains, withal, in his fashion, a humanist.Human JurisprudenceJudicial processUnited StatesJudicial processAustraliaJudicial processJapanJudicial processJudicial processJudicial process347/.73Schubert Glendon228311MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910367638703321Human jurisprudence2857339UNINA