Results 271 to 280 of about 392,603 (314)
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Sodomy in Ecclesiastical Law and Theory
Journal of Homosexuality, 1976In the 13th century, sodomy, which was classified among the various sins against mature, was regarded as a primarily clerical vice. In both systematic theology and canon law, the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah was considered the just punishment for a sin that violated the natural procreative function of sexuality, was contrary to right reason and ...
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On Freud's theory of law and religion
International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 2016This paper is a critical engagement with Freud's anthropological theory of the origins of law and religion, which Freud developed as his representation and development of the Oedipal myth. Freud's mythology, it is argued, is the theoretical result of the essentially narrative nature of psychoanalytical praxis.
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Rethinking law in neofunctionalist theory
Journal of European Public Policy, 2005Abstract Haas's original neofunctionalist theory did not give express consideration to the role of law in the integration process. However, neofunctionalism had an intuitive resonance for legal scholars who generally assumed that law played an important part in advancing European integration.
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Laws of Conservation in the Queueing Theory
2010The history of laws of preservation of the queuing theory is considered. Additional formulations, their consequences and use at the calculation of complex queueing systems and networks are discussed. It is offered to use more actively conservation laws at training at the universities and at research work.
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2014
In this contribution I put forward the argument that (1) the application of the adjudicative principle of ‘procedural autonomy’ leads to the creation of a European judge-made procedural law. Further, this procedural law exhibits (2) a potentially problematic trans-substantive tendency, as well as (3) a conceptual difficulty as it is applied regardless ...
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In this contribution I put forward the argument that (1) the application of the adjudicative principle of ‘procedural autonomy’ leads to the creation of a European judge-made procedural law. Further, this procedural law exhibits (2) a potentially problematic trans-substantive tendency, as well as (3) a conceptual difficulty as it is applied regardless ...
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Criminal Law Theory: Introduction
Criminal Law and Philosophy, 2023Mark Dsouza, Alon Harel, Re'Em Segev
exaly
Is the “New Natural Law Theory” Actually a Natural Law Theory?
2012The most peculiar and controversial aspect of John Finnis’ and Germain Grisez’s account of natural law theory is their tacit acceptance of David Hume’s and George Edward Moore’s thesis about the impossibility of deriving “ought” from “is” (“naturalistic fallacy”) and, therefore, their understanding of natural law principles as principia per se nota ...
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