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The law in quest of itself

Union, N.J.: Lawbook Exchange (1940)

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  1. A Critical Recuperation of Watsuji’s Rinrigaku.Aleardo Zanghellini & Mai Sato - 2020 - Philosophia 49 (3):1289-1307.
    Watsuji is recognised as one Japan’s foremost philosophers. His work on ethics, Rinrigaku, is cosmopolitan in engaging the Western philosophical tradition, and in presupposing an international audience. Yet Watsuji’s ethical thought is largely of niche interest outside Japan, and it is critiqued on the ground that it ratifies totalitarianism, demanding individuals’ unquestioning subordination to communal demands. We offer a reading of Rinrigaku that, in attempting to trace the text’s intention, disputes these arguments. We argue that Rinrigaku makes individual autonomy central (...)
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  • Rights, Wrongs, and Responsibilities: Law and Ethics in the Newsroom.Paul S. Voakes - 2000 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 15 (1):29-42.
    How do journalists sort out the tangle of legal rights and ethical responsibilities in their everyday news work? A survey of 1,037 journalists and in-depth interviews with 22 others, found substantial evidence for 3 models of the relation of law and ethics: a Separate Realms model, a Correspondence model, and a new "Responsibility Model" in which the law is considered in problematic situations but only as one of several considerations in what is essentially an ethical decision. The findings have implications (...)
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  • Bibliographical essay / legal positivism, natural law, and the Hart/Dworkin debate.Stephen W. Ball - 1984 - Criminal Justice Ethics 3 (2):68-85.