五分钟法哲学(英文版)Five Minutes of Legal Philosophy (1945)
拉德布鲁赫《五分钟法理学》研究
拉德布鲁赫《五分钟法理学》研究拉德布鲁赫是新康德主义法学的著名代表人物之一。
①由于二战的惨痛经历和纳粹的种种暴行,使得他对自己先前的理论予以反省,并开始认可自然法学派中的某些思想。
在《五分钟法理学》中,拉氏对法律实证主义提出质疑和批判,并提出新思想。
他的法律思想甚至影响到联邦德国法院在战后对纳粹战犯的审判中,一些意义重大的案件的判决。
西方法学界公认拉德布鲁赫在二战后的改变,对战后新自然法学说的兴起了重大推动作用,下面简要分析这五分钟。
一、第一分钟第一分钟里最令人印象深刻的便是“哪里有强权,哪里就有法”。
乍一看,不免让人觉得强权即法律。
此句放在文中,最具时代意义。
作为在战后担任过魏玛共和国司法部长的拉德布鲁赫,在经历纳粹的极端迫害后,发出对强制力与法律关系的质疑,可谓是发自肺腑的感慨。
奥斯丁在19世纪喊出:“法律是主权者的命令”,命令比法律便利甚至更有效,用命令取代法律,是之后近两个世纪很多地方不断发生的现象。
法律离不开强制力,但强制力不等于法律。
法律的强制力不在于法律背后的权力大小,而在于法律本身彰显的内容和精神内涵,是否公平与正义。
受实证主义命令说的影响,希特勒统治的“第三帝国”法律成为纳粹施行暴政、迫害他人的法律依据。
实证主义认为支撑法律的背后权力没有问题,具有合法性,便自然具有正当性。
这种错误的法律观念为纳粹的残暴行为披上了美丽的外衣,误导了人民大众。
而事实真的如此吗?强权即公理吗?从文中可以看出,作者是不认可这种荒谬的实证主义观点,他认为法律必须包括人类追求的理念在内,如若不然,如何解释人类为何创制法律。
拉德布鲁赫公式之一,便是法的安定性原则高于正义性。
他认为,法律所追求的不是一种价值,而是三种价值:正义、公共利益(功利)和秩序(确定性),即法应具安定性要求,即法律制度本身应足够完善,并具有可操作性。
法律即使满足了事实上的“安定”,能够得到有效的实施,也不能证明其在理念上的满足,必须得到法的正义性和合目的性的检验。
关于法律的英语名言法律有权打破平静.doc
关于法律的英语名言:法律有权打破平静1、法律有权打破平静。
Law has the right to break the peace.2、战鼓一响,法律无声。
Where drums beat, laws are silent.3、法律一多,公正就少。
Laws one more, just little.4、法律源于人的自卫本能。
Law is the result of self-preservation.5、法律是一种强制性秩序。
Law is a kind of mandatory order.6、法律之内,应有天理人情在。
Within the law, should have them in.7、有多少罪孽就会有多少法律。
How many SINS will be how many laws.8、法律只但是是咱们意志的记录。
Law is only but we will record.9、水者火之备,法者止奸之禁也。
Water is a case of fire, legislators stop rape of the ban also.10、好法律是由坏风俗创造出来的。
The good law is created by the bad custom.11、举证职责之所在,即败诉之所在。
The responsibility of proof, namely the losing.12、宪法,就是一张写着人民权利的纸。
The constitution, is a piece of paper written on the rights of the people.13、法律和制度务必跟上人类思想进步。
Be sure to keep up with the progress in human thought of law and system.14、法律地在暴力面前是没有发言权的。
The law is no say in the presence of violence.15、法无授权不得为,法无禁止不得罚。
会前“迎向未来”五分钟倒计时幻灯片38页PPT
41、实际上,我们想要的不是针对犯 罪的法 律,而 是针对 疯狂的 法律。 ——马 克·吐温 42、法律的力量应当跟随着公民,就 像影子 跟随着 身体一 样。— —贝卡 利亚 43、法律和制度必须跟上人类思想进 步。— —杰弗 逊 44、人类受制于法律,法律受制于情 理。— —托·富 勒
Thank Leabharlann ou45、法律的制定是为了保证每一个人 自由发 挥自己 的才能 ,而不 是为了 束缚他 的才能 。—— 罗伯斯 庇尔
6、最大的骄傲于最大的自卑都表示心灵的最软弱无力。——斯宾诺莎 7、自知之明是最难得的知识。——西班牙 8、勇气通往天堂,怯懦通往地狱。——塞内加 9、有时候读书是一种巧妙地避开思考的方法。——赫尔普斯 10、阅读一切好书如同和过去最杰出的人谈话。——笛卡儿
西方--法哲学
六、现实主义法学 (一)美国现实主义法学 1、实证主义与社会学、心理学研究的结合 2、法律是对法院判决的预测 3、法的不确定性理论 (二)北欧现实主义法学 七、伯克利学派
(一)对纯粹法社会学的批判 (二)诺内特的法的类型论
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五、世俗的自然法学
(一)富勒的法哲学思想 1、事业论 2、法与道德
(二)罗尔斯的法哲学思想 1、功利主义的分配正义理论 2、罗尔斯的社会正义理论
(三)德沃金的法哲学思想 1、对实证主义的批判 2、对法律运行机制的评论 3、对公民权利的论证
第三章 新分析实证主义法学派
一、分析实证主义法学的传统 (一)实证主义的起源
三、新分析法学 (一)新分析法学的特征 (二)哈特的语义分析法哲学
1、语义分析哲学的概况 2、“最低限度的自然法”思想 (三)拉兹的法哲学
法律的作用 四、对新分析法学的总体评价 (一)有助于克服法学研究中的“定义偏好” (二)有助于消解语言中的歧义避免不必要的争论
第四章 社会法学派 一、社会法学派的形成与发展 (一)20世纪前的社会法学 (二)20世纪初到30、40年代的社会法学 (三)20世纪40年代到60年代的社会法学 (四)20世纪60年代以后的社会法学
第八章 制度法理学
一、制度法理学的总体介绍 (一)麦考密克介绍 (二)魏因伯格介绍
二、制度法理学的理论宗旨和目标 (一)规范主义与反规范主义 (二)法律实证主义的观念 (三)将道德与价值包容与实在法之中
三、制度法理学的认识论与方法论 (一)非唯知论 (二)解释学方法 (三)分析方法
四、制度法理学的本体论 (一)制度概念 (二)制度性事实 (三)法律作为一种特殊性的制度性事实
法律英语参考译文 完整版Lesson1-16
当然,对法律编纂的目标也有回应。倡导法典编纂者认为这会使法律的确定 性,统一和系统的法律记载更有可能,而反对者声称法典编纂会导致法律僵化。
普通法 普通法构成了历史作为英国领地和英国殖民地国家的主要法律。它
市民法是世界盛行的法律体系,它源于罗马法,没有详尽的规则系统,通常 是法典式的,它被法官应用和解释。然而,现代法律系统是 19 世界法典编纂运 动的派生物,在那期间大多数重要法定(尤其是拿破仑法典和德国民法典)诞生 了。
市民法以罗马法为基础,尤其是《查士丁尼民法大全》,后来在中世纪由中 世纪的法官发展。对罗马法的吸收接纳,不同国家有不同的特点。在一些国家, 它的影响来自于立法机关的法令,亦即罗马法成为有建设性的法律。而在另一些 国家,罗马法则在法律理论家主张的审核程式上被接受。
于,来源于 live under 在……统治下生活)
普通法和制定法存在于美国法律制度中。在历史发展进程中,法律的某些部 门几乎不由制定法所控制,而是由司法判决所控制。例如,合同法大部分内容就 是在英国法律制度的演进中由普通法的法官发展出来的。当然,这并不意味着这 一法律部门就不存在立法。立法机关实际上也制定涵盖合同内容的法律,立法广
法由规则的全部所组成。这些全部的规则在构建的政府机关下被适应、被执 行,以确定什么样的行为是正确的、什么样的行为是可被允许的、以及什么样的 行为是应被否定或惩罚的。
没有法律,社会就会处于无政府状态。法律是社会赖以生存的手段,它提供 个人保障,它建立制度和维持社会秩序、保持社会秩序、保证社会健康和安全, 它提供一个和平解决争端的方式,它维持人与人之间在经济关系中的稳定性和灵 活性,以及它禁止对社会有破坏性的行为。规章制度反映其所实施的社会和时代。 法律的发展是符合实际的,它在其日常运作中随着社会对合理性和灵活性的需求 而发展。
美剧Boston Legal波士顿法律第5季第9集剧本(英语)
Boston LegalKill, Baby, Kill!Season 5, Episode 9Broadcast: Nov. 17, 2008Written By: Lawrence Broch & David E. KelleyDirected By: Robert Yannetti© 2008 David E. Kelley Productions. All Rights Reserved.Transcribed Imamess for ; Thank you to olucy for proofreading and to Dana for the pictures.At Crane, Poole and Schmidt JennyPratt steps off the elevator. As shecrosses the oncoming Denny Crane hedoes a sharp pivot and falls in lock-step right behind her, he's closeenough to smell her hair so he does.Sensing somebody behind her, shestops, he collides, nearly knocking herover.Jenny Pratt: Oh!Denny Crane: I'm terribly sorry. I didn'tsee you there. How may I help you?Jenny Pratt: Ah, um I’m looking for CarlSack.Denny Crane: I'm Carl Sack.Jenny Pratt: You're Carl Sack?Denny Crane: At your service. He kissesher hand. Full service.Jenny Pratt: I've seen photographs of Mr. Sack and…Denny Crane: I look shorter in person. And fatter. And… Carl walks up. Hello, Denny!Carl Sack: I'm Carl Sack.Denny Crane: He's got the mad cow. Makes him think he's Carl…Jenny Pratt: I'm Jenny Pratt.Carl Sack: Yes, uhm, let's go to my office.They leave for Carl's office, Denny follows.Jenny Pratt: There were a dozen eyewitnesses and they all tell the same story. We see flashbacks as she tells her story. Dwayne Willis was brought in a little before nine PM. They strapped him down on the table and hooked up the two IVs, one in each arm. The first drug is supposed to render the condemned man unconscious. It didn't. It was now ten past nine. The drugs had been going into him for nearly ten minutes. That's when Officer Holt started getting worried. More time goes by. Willis has been hooked up to the drip for twenty minutes now. He's still conscious! An argument breaks out. The tech wants to pull the IVs out and try again, another guard says, "No! Just increase the dosage." And then Willis starts thrashing about, his chest is heaving, he's gasping, choking, it's horrifying! And Holt says, "Dosomething!" but nobody knows what to do.Willis has been hooked up for a half hournow. He's not even unconscious! He'sgagging and thrashing. And that's whenHolt just snapped. He fired one round intoWillis' head. Willis died instantly. End offlashback. Back in Carl’s office. He'scharged with Murder Two, but the D.A. iswilling to knock it down to manslaughter,only Holt won't take the deal.Carl Sack: Ms. Pratt.Jenny Pratt: Jenny.Carl Sack: There must be many lawyers inVirginia who could do this.Jenny Pratt: Yeah. I need an advocatewho can speak forcibly against the death penalty itself.Carl Sack: Jenny, whatever one's feelings are on the death penalty…Denny Crane: For it!Carl Sack: It's moot here. Your client carried out a death sentence. Albeit in a unique fashion.Jenny Pratt: But the legal issue is also unique. Is it even possible to murder a man who's being executed? Denny Crane: Double homicide! Happens all the time.Carl Sack: A double homicide is when two people are killed, Denny.Denny Crane: What's your point?A beat.Carl Sack: Listen Jenny, I’m not sure…Denny Crane: Carl, Virginia is a swing state. I've always wanted to swing.Carl Sack: Denny.Carl Sack: Carl! We need to bond! Hell, man, this is our last season. If there's one thing I've learned in life it's never, ever say no to a road trip.At a Virginia State jailhouse, Jenny, Carland Denny are sitting across the table fromOfficer Preston Holt in a visiting room.Officer Preston Holt: I just couldn't watch himsuffer anymore. If I had to do it over again I'ddo the same thing.Carl Sack: You only fired the one shot?Officer Preston Holt: Yes.Carl Sack: We could go with "Defense ofOthers" but since you went into the room toparticipate in executing the man, I don'tthink…Officer Preston Holt: I didn't go in to torturehim!Carl Sack: Another approach, a version ofdiminished capacity. You were overcome withcompassion…Denny Crane: In Virginia?Carl Sack: Moreover your years of witnessing executions could have taken a mental toll.Officer Preston Holt: I'm not arguing that.Carl Sack: How about simple temporary insanity? You saw a man suffering, you snapped.Officer Preston Holt: No! I knew exactly what I did while I was doing it. I'd do it again.Carl Sack: We don't have a lot to go with here.Officer Preston Holt: I won't say I was insane.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh's office.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: You want us to just cuthim loose?Carl Sack: You make it sound as if he's strungup somewhere. Let's not get ahead ofourselves.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: Mr. Sack, you're astranger here…Carl Sack: I knew it. They plan to play thestranger card.Denny Crane: Aren't we all brothers, myfriend?D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: This is a very seriousmatter.Carl Sack: Yes, it is. So! I thought perhaps wecould be serious for a second. You don't meanto tell a jury of your fellow Virginians that shooting a man the Commonwealth was in the process of killing was murder? Or manslaughter? Or in fact any crime at all?D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: It was a crime. According to the law!Carl Sack: Understood. But a D.A. has discretion whether to charge. To Denny. Do they not?In the familiar Denny and Carl rapid-fire speed.Denny Crane: The good ones do.Carl Sack: Well, he looks good.Denny Crane: Looks great.Carl Sack: Best I've seen.Denny Crane: Me too.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: Look, I am not dismissing the charges. He is going on trial. For murder.Denny Crane: You're not my brother anymore. Which I believe leaves me free to have sex with your sister.A beat as D.A. Jack Fitzhugh doesn't respond.Carl Sack: We try to make our cases fun.Alan Shore's office.Martha Headly: I can't thank you enoughfor seeing me, Alan.Alan Shore: He motions to a chair.Please.They both sit.Martha Headly: So? I hear you've becomequite the busy man these days, huh? Biglawyer! A celebrity of sorts.Alan Shore: Ah ha! He shakes his head.Martha Headly: Well, you look great!Alan Shore: Thank you.Martha Headly: Yeah.You know, I alwaysfigured you to age fat and bald.Alan Shore: Well, I was lucky enough tostave off the evil that so ages men.Martha Headly: Which is?Alan Shore: Marriage. A beat. What's up, Martha?Martha Headly: Well, unfortunately I was fired from my job.Alan Shore: Ah.Martha Headly: Yeah. A very good job, I might add. I was district sales manager for a software company. In line to become regional sales manager. Now I know this might be hard to prove but I think I got fired because I voted for John McCain! My boss and I, we got into this big fight over the election and as soon as I told him who I voted for he just got this look of disgust on his face. As… She notices Alan's sneer. Not entirely dissimilar to the expression on your face at the moment. But anyway, ah, so he fired me!Alan Shore: Did he give you a reason?Martha Headly: No! No, they don't have to give a reason anymore. They're advised by their labor lawyers not to. But I know it was because I voted for McCain. I can feel it in my bones, Alan.In Judge Walter Yardley's courtroom.Officer Mike Carr: And the prisoner started gasping for breath and moving around on the table.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: Is that uncommon?Officer Mike Carr: It's happened before. No two lethal injections ever seem to go exactly the same way. There was a lot of screaming and yelling. Officer Holt became very upset. Then he suddenly pulled out his gun and shot the prisoner in the head.Carl Sack: He gets up. Are you familiar with the case Emmett v Johnson?Officer Mike Carr: I heard of it. Something like lethal injection is cruel and barbaric.Carl Sack: Something like. According to briefs filed in that case, Virginia's method, in particular, carries a greater risk of pain than the method used in Kentucky which the Supreme Court approved.Officer Mike Carr: Our methods are substantially the same.Carl Sack: The brief includes evidence that members of the death team, including I assume, you, don't understand how the drugs work. Don't know how to properly administer an IV. And don't know how correctly to observe the inmate during the execution to determine if anything is going wrong.Officer Mike Carr: That's an argument in a lawsuit. There's another argument on the other side. Why don't you read that?Carl Sack: Oh, I'm sure there is. Are you aware that a prominent medical society has found Virginia's method of execution unacceptable?Officer Mike Carr: I know doctors have an issue with the death penalty in general. So it wouldn't surprise me if some physicians’ group said that.Carl Sack: Neither would I. Except the group I'm referring to happens to be the American Veterinary Medical Association. Some vets have banned your lethal injection protocol because the method Virginia uses on humans is considered too barbaric to be used on cats and dogs.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: Objection! The AVMA has said that their report was misinterpreted!Judge Walter Yardley: Sustained. Mr. Sack, this case is not about the legitimacy of the death penalty. If that's where you're coming from you can tuck in your little tail and head on back to Massachusetts.Carl Sack: Your Honor, I'm very proud of myhome state. It's home of the Red Sox. ThePatriots. Mitt.Judge Walter Yardley: We take our laws herein Virginia very seriously, sir.Carl Sack: Do you take this case seriously?He raises his right hand. Show of hands!Because you know it is a bit silly…D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: Objection!Carl Sack: …there's a man on trial here fortrying to kill somebody the State was alreadykilling! If anything, my client accomplished thedeath penalty!Judge Walter Yardley: Mr. Sack!Carl Sack: The legitimacy of which I certainlywould never question, particularly in Virginia.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: Your Honor!Judge Walter Yardley: Mr. Sack!Carl Sack: How about torture? Are we forthat?Judge Walter Yardley: He points his gavel.I'm warning you!Carl Sack: Because this man was beingtortured, that's why my client…D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: Objection, Your Honor!Objection!Judge Walter Yardley: Order! He pounds hisgavel. Order! He pounds his gavel. Order!He pounds his gavel. Order! He pounds hisgavel.Denny Crane: He takes out a gun andshoots at the ceiling. Gasps and screamsare heard throughout the courtroom. Take control of the room, will you, Judge?Judge Walter Yardley: Bailiff!Denny is sitting behind bars. A guard leads Carl in.Denny Crane: Blanks! What's his problem?Carl Sack: How'd you even get the gun in the courtroom?Denny Crane: Oh please.Carl Sack: Denny, what are you doing?Denny Crane: Would you relax? Like I said, firstly it was blanks! Secondly, this is Virginia! My approval rating went up in that room. I'm a hero to those people. I couldn't be more popular if I got kids to smoke cigarettes. A beat as Carl doesn't respond then turns to leave. Carl! Don't leave me here, I can't swing in here. Without turning back Carl waves goodbye. Alan's way more fun!Donald Feldcamp's office.Alan Shore: I appreciate you making the time to see me.Donald Feldcamp: Ah, sure. Well, actually my lawyer told me not to see you. But I never listen to him anyway.Alan Shore: I know you certainly didn't bother consulting with him before firing Martha.Donald Feldcamp: Nice try.Alan Shore: Why did you fire her, Mr. Feldcamp?Donald Feldcamp: He sighs. Wasn't working out.Alan Shore: How so?Donald Feldcamp: Oh, hard to say. You know, as an employer you sometimes get a feel for an employee, and with Martha--hard worker, but she was never gonna make the next step. In this company you either move up or you move out!Alan Shore: Martha's of the impression that you fired her because she voted for John McCain in the election. Donald Feldcamp: She's mistaken. Look, I voted for McCain. All right? Martha simply wasn't working out!Alan Shore: There must be a reason you didn't think she was working out. He waits for a response. Donald just sighs. If I have to depose you to force an answer I can do so, but you seem to be rather forthcoming. Why not you just tell me now?Donald Feldcamp: Okay. She's stupid.Alan Shore: And as for evidence of her stupidity?Donald Feldcamp: Oh! Ta! I could cite many!Alan Shore: Cite one.Donald Feldcamp: She voted for McCain.Alan Shore: You said you voted for him.Donald Feldcamp: Hm. Yeah, I did. I voted forhim because I like his policies on nuclearenergy. Because I believed he'd make a betterCommander-in-Chief in times of war. BecauseI trusted his experience. But Martha voted forhim because she felt Sarah Palin to bespunky.Alan Shore: So you admit you fired herbecause of who she voted for?Donald Feldcamp: No, I fired her because sheis stupid! Look. I got a bad feeling about her,you know? It's plain and simple.Alan Shore: I'm starting to get a bad feelingabout you.Donald Feldcamp: Ha! Then it's lucky for methat you're not my boss! He sighs. Look, arewe done?Alan Shore: No, I’m afraid we're not done. Herises. Rather it seems we're just beginning.Donald Feldcamp: You know what, Mr.Shore? I fire people all the time! And some ofthem go on to sue me. This is "at will"employment here. It's my will. So if you wannafile a lawsuit, just join the club.Alan Shore: Oh, I'm not a member of any clubI assure you. I tend to stick out. I don't mind. Itmakes me more memorable. You'll rememberme, Mr. Feldcamp. He turns to leave.Donald Feldcamp: Don't let the door hit you onthe way out.Judge Walter Yardley's courtroom.Dr. Linda Corbin: First is sodium thiopental, which is a barbiturate. Next come pancuronium bromide, a muscle relaxant that paralyzes the diaphragm and thus stops breathing. Then potassium chloride is injected, and that stops the heart.Carl Sack: But that's not what happened here?Dr. Linda Corbin: Not exactly.Carl Sack: What did happen?Dr. Linda Corbin: Well, the technician who started the IV on the prisoner missed the vein in one arm, and in the other arm, he stuck the needle through the prisoner's vein and into his muscle tissue.Carl Sack: Do you know of other botched executions using the lethal injection method?Dr. Linda Corbin: There have been too many to list! This is something that should be done by doctors, but doctors refuse to do it on ethical grounds.Carl Sack: But to be fair, in most instances where lethal injection is used, the condemned man just sort of drifts off to sleep without incident.Dr. Linda Corbin: It's more likely that the paralytic agent simply prevents prisoners from communicating. In fact they could be suffocating, suffering excruciating pain during the procedure--they're just unable to scream.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh is now up.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: How many of these so-called botched executions occurred in Virginia?Dr. Linda Corbin: One.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: And the Supreme Court has approved the method of lethal injection used in theCommonwealth of Virginia?Carl Sack: And we know they're suchsticklers.Judge Walter Yardley: Mr. Sack, I will holdyou in contempt!D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: And the Supreme Courthas not approved prison guards shootingcondemned prisoners in the head? Havethey?Carl Sack: Has anybody asked them?Judge Walter Yardley: Now look, we all knowthings went wrong here, that's not the point. Iwill repeat, the question here is do we simplygive prison guards the right to just whip outtheir guns and blast away?Carl Sack: Well thank you, Your Honor, forframing the issue in such a neutral andimpartial way.Shirley Schmidt's office.Shirley Schmidt: Why do you need my help?Alan Shore: Well, I don't. Probably it's just Denny is out of town.Shirley Schmidt: Will you give up ever?Alan Shore: I have no one to share private thoughts with tonight on the balcony! Shirley, this man, Feldcamp—the unfettered, smug, arrogance—he could almost make Rudy Giuliani seem humble. Come on! It'll be fun! Shirley Schmidt: He really fired her because of how she voted?Alan Shore: Well he's claiming it's stupidity, but yes, I think he did.Shirley Schmidt: And what exactly would my role be?Alan Shore: Why do you say it with such distrust?Shirley Schmidt: Because I can smell a dog on the sniff.Alan Shore: Don't be ridiculous! You're almost old enough to be my mother. Or one of my mother's friends! The one who used to sunbathe naked by the pool.Shirley Schmidt: So you want to march into court tomorrow, the two of us side by side and fight for a woman who…Alan Shore: Who voted for John McCain.Shirley sighs.Judge Victoria Peyton's courtroom. Alan and Attorney Wayne Davidson stand in front of the Judge. Alan Shore: He all but admitted to me, Your Honor, that he fired her because she voted for John McCain. Attorney Wayne Davidson: He made no such admission! The basis was her stupidity!Alan Shore: Yes, and the evidence of that was her vote. Look, they got into a big political debate three days before…Attorney Wayne Davidson: During which the plaintiff further displayed a complete lack of intellect which prompted my client…Alan Shore: Because she didn't share your client's political point of view.Attorney Wayne Davidson: My client voted for McCain!Your Honor, my client is a Republican who is happy withMs. Headly's vote, but nonetheless could not ignore thatshe was… well… dumb.Martha Headly: How dare you?Judge Victoria Peyton: Ms. Headly.Martha Headly: He just called me dumb and stupid!Judge Victoria Peyton: Ms. H eadly. Mr. Davidson, asI read the affidavit, it does seem like she was fired forher political opinions.Attorney Wayne Davidson: Free speech is not a right inthe workplace. People are hired for their opinions andperceived intellect. That's why we have interviews, todetermine whether we like what comes out of theirmouths.Alan Shore: Listen, the fact is this woman did get hired and then she was discharged for exactly as you say, Your Honor, her political opinion.Judge Victoria Peyton: All right, I want to hear Ms Headly on the stand and I want to hear exactly how this went down. Let's go.Martha gets up.Judge Walter Yardley's courtroom.Officer Preston Holt: It seemed like… I dunno like, like ithad gone past the point of torture even. I, I just couldn'twatch him suffer anymore. So I um… I took him out.Carl Sack: Did you stop to think, sir… that you werebreaking the law by…Officer Preston Holt: All I could see was a personsuffering just way beyond the point of… It was inhumane.Somebody had to do somethin'. I yelled at the others butthey just stood there… It just wasn't right!D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: He is now up. You decided all byyourself to take a human life?Officer Preston Holt: Well, the man was dying anyway. Imade the decision to be humane about it.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: I see. I've prosecuted two doctors who made the same decision. They had terminal patients in agony so they decided to hasten their deaths. In fact, I believe your family faced a similar situation. Youhad an aunt who was dying of ovarian cancer, am Iright?Officer Preston Holt: Yes.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: And there were those in yourfamily who wanted to put her on a morphine drip to…speed things up. Because she was suffering so. Is thattrue?Officer Preston Holt: Yes.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: What was your position there? Doyou remember?Officer Preston Holt: I was against it.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: You thought it was murder, didn'tyou? You told your mother and the doctor, "Only Godgets to make that call." Do you now amend that to'God and correctional officers'?Judge Victoria Peyton courtroom.Martha Headly: We got into this huge argument on nuclear energy--I'm against it and he's for it. Now that argument somehow got replaced by some brouhaha on the war. I'm against it and he's for it. And that segued into taxes! He doesn't think he should have to pay any, and I said…Alan Shore: So you had a lot of political differences?Martha Headly: Yes. Yes. Alan makes a rolling motion with his hands to indicate “let’s keep things moving.” Well then the very next day after I did inform him that I voted for McCain he called me a complete idiot!Alan Shore: Mr. Feldcamp called you an idiot?Martha Headly: A complete one!Alan Shore: And then what happened?Martha Headly: Well, not long after that he walked into my office and he fired me.Attorney Wayne Davidson is now up.Attorney Wayne Davidson: Have you ever had any yearly reviews with respect to your employment with Mr. Feldcamp?Martha Headly: Yes.Attorney Wayne Davidson: How'd they go?Martha Headly: Okay. He said I could perform better. And he said sales could be higher. But in this economy? Come on! To the Judge. You know that! It's bad everywhere! I mean it's like the number one problem in this country right now!Attorney Wayne Davidson: So you consider the economy to be the number one problem in the country? Martha Headly: Yes, I do.Attorney Wayne Davidson: Hm. If I may ask, how does John McCain's economic policy differ from Barak Obama's?Martha Headly: A beat. Taxes. Another beat. And um… well, I'm not exactly sure what else, to be honest. Attorney Wayne Davidson: Well, if you consider it to be the number one problem in the country…?Martha Headly: Look, even despite how they all say they'll be different, they all do the same thing once they get elected! To the Judge. Come on! You know that!Attorney Wayne Davidson: You werean ardent Hillary Clinton supporter,were you not?Martha Headly: Yes, I was! Proudly!Attorney Wayne Davidson: Andaccording to your co-workers youcrossed over to McCain primarilybecause of Sarah Palin.Martha Headly: Yes!Attorney Wayne Davidson: Becauseher policies were consistent withHillary's?Martha Headly: Because I wasimpressed with her. And because shestrikes me as a real American! Whichis what this country needs!Attorney Wayne Davidson: And youliked her spunk?Martha Headly: And the countryneeds spunk too, yes!In a bar, Denny and Carl are having a drink.Carl Sack: I don't have a good feeling on this one, Denny. Virginia is not being nice to me.Denny Crane: A little constructive criticism?Carl Sack: Okay.Denny Crane: You're not very good.Carl Sack: That's for keeping it constructive.Denny Crane: You're making this a referendum on the death penalty. You gotta get through that Liberal Democrat skull. Americans love the death penalty!Carl Sack: We do?Denny Crane: Yeah! Especially these parts. Hillary and Obama, you know those pinko-heads couldn't really be pro death penalty. But they claim they are. In fact almost everyone who runs for President miraculously is for the death penalty. Why? Cause this is the US of A! Death penalty rules! Flip the switch, ready-aim-fire, turn up thegas, it's who we are as a people. Hell, you heard it at the Republican convention, Kill, baby, kill. That's ourmantra, Carl.Carl Sack: I thought Republican were prolife.Denny Crane: That's for babies. Criminalswe kill. You're going about this ass-backwards. Your argument you wanna maketo the jury is this: that Willis guy, he wasn'tdying the way he was supposed to. Afterreceiving the injection the bastard refused tochoke out, so our client finished him off. Jobdone. Game over. Bang. Preston Holt,American hero. Kill, baby, kill.On the balcony, Alan and Shirley arehaving a scotch and cigars.Shirley Schmidt: Do you think... Martha andSarah and Joe the... is he an electrician?Alan Shore: Plumber. Unlicensed.Shirley Schmidt: Are, are they the real Americans?Alan Shore: Not necessarily. I think that's what this election just proved. That real Americans aren't just rural and white. The portrait of real Americans has been redrawn in this election. Real Americans are of all ages, races, ethnicities. They live in cities and apartments as well as... farms. They... we have a president-elect who fits into no category or demographic whatsoever other than he's an American.Shirley Schmidt: She sighs. I wept that night. Did you?Alan Shore: No! I just... watched and watched and... didn't want the night to end. I already miss Sarah Palin, though. Shirley laughs. She was fun while she lasted. I hope they let her keep the wardrobe.Shirley Schmidt: I still have to say though, as heartened as I am by the election and by America...Alan Shore: What?Shirley Schmidt: Martha's a little bit of an idiot.Alan Shore: Shirley, almost forty-seven percent of this country didn't vote for Obama, perhaps because they disagreed with him on the issues, which is fine. But some, no doubt, because they thought he was Muslim with terrorists on his speed dial, and others because they were convinced he was not only socialist, but even worse, a bad bowler. And others still because they simply loved those cream-colored jackets Sarah may have to give back. But there's one thing all those idiots have in common.Shirley Schmidt: What?Alan Shore: They still get to vote.Shirley takes a puff from her cigar.Alan watches.Shirley Schmidt: What?Alan Shore: Sorry. Just looking at youunder a gently lit sky, sharing the sameoral fixation Denny and I.Shirley Schmidt: Is it a little game, Alanor are you really sexually attracted tome?Alan Shore: I'm sexually attracted to you.Shirley Schmidt: She chuckles. I'm inmy sixties.Alan Shore: Well, first of all you'rebeautiful. And second, your intellect is…dazzling. And third I've seen the nakedpictures of you.Shirley Schmidt: Shirley laughs. Oh, right!Alan Shore: Let’s not discuss the cheerleader outfit.They look at each other for a moment.Shirley Schmidt: So if I, I wanted to go there, you'd go there?Alan Shore: In a second. Oh, if only Obama had picked you as Vice President. What a world we'd have then.In Judge Walter Yardley's courtroom.D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: Look, I can see the defendant's point. The man was dying anyway. What's the big deal? Well, what about the doctor or the hospice worker who wants to speed the death of that cancer patient dying in agony? What about the nurses who opt to withhold treatment from those severely retarded infants who only face a lifetime of misery? We don't go down that path. We don't start measuring the quality of people's lives to decide whether or not they live. The defendant took the law into his own hands and murdered somebody. Nobody gets the right to do that. Whether the person is on death row, whether a person has a day left to live. An hour. Or even a minute. You don't get to shoot somebody. That's the law.Carl Sack: That's the law! He gets up. Because of a presumed sanctity of human life? That sanctity was off the table here. The life was being executed by the State. Carl looks to Denny, they share a look. Ah, forgive me, but you know what I think is really going on is this man doesn't like capital punishment and he's trying to bring scrutiny upon it. It's the only possible explanation! If he can get you to say this execution was wrong, well that's one step from saying, "Gee! Maybe executions are wrong."D.A. Jack Fitzhugh: That's ridiculous!Carl Sack: More ridiculous than accusing a man of murdering someone who was being executed? Let's not kid ourselves. There are those out there trying to get rid of capital punishment. And I would suspect they have to be tricky because they know we, the people, are overwhelmingly for it. We the people know the death penalty is one of the things that makes America… well, America. Not many countries have it, you know. We're the only westernized country left. And it's not easy being in the company of Iraq, China, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Sudan. And I'll admit the reasons for abolishing capital punishment are compelling. It costs us hundreds of millions of dollars. Up to six times more than life imprisonment. It doesn't seem to deter crime. Murder rates are actually lower in non-death penalty states. It's well known. Canada's homicide rate fell forty percent after they abolished the death penalty. We botch executions. A lot. Medical evidence now shows that even when they go off withouta hitch the executed sufferperhaps excruciating pain. Thereare many reasons to do awaywith capital punishment.But wedon't! Because let's face it, thedeath enalty--it's who we are asa people. We're an eye-for-an-eye kind of nation. And we don'thave to apologize for it. Listen, ifsomebody killed my son? Webelieve in executing murderers!It's justice. The only thing myclient did here was carry out theState's mission. It makes nosense to be prosecuting him.The only conceivableexplanation is that this man isinsidiously trying to bringscrutiny on the death penaltybecause he secretly is against it. Carl sits down with a doubtful scowl on his face.Judge Victoria Peyton's courtroom.Donald Feldcamp: No, look, as I said to her lawyer over there, I like Martha Headly. Nice lady. But my God, sales is about selling, it's about relating to people. She doesn't even read the newspaper.Attorney Wayne Davidson: Well, George Bush doesn't read the paper.Donald Feldcamp: I would never hire George Bush. Would anybody?Attorney Wayne Davidson: And you voted for John McCain whose politics…Donald Feldcamp: No, no, no, this is not about politics! This about being smart or not smart! And she is the latter.Judge Victoria Peyton: Mr. Feldcamp, to be fair, you're basing your conclusion on her political opinion.Donald Feldcamp: No, what I'm saying is whatever your opinion is about anything, at least be able to defend it. And failing that, articulate it. Martha's never been the brightest bulb in the tanning booth, but when she talks。
五分钟的法哲学
五分钟的法哲学五分钟法哲学在我们忙碌的生活中,时间显得尤为宝贵。
我们常常希望能够在短时间内获得最大的收益,从而提高生活质量。
于是,五分钟法哲学应运而生。
五分钟法哲学,顾名思义,是指利用短短的五分钟来实现某种目标或获得某种收益的方法。
它的核心思想在于有效地利用时间,将短暂的片刻变成有意义的时刻。
五分钟法哲学强调时间的价值。
我们常常会觉得五分钟太短,无法完成什么有意义的事情。
然而,如果我们能够找到合适的方式,将这五分钟用于某种有意义的活动,那么这五分钟就会变得非常宝贵。
比如,我们可以利用五分钟阅读一篇文章,学习一项新技能,或者进行简单的体育锻炼。
尽管这些活动在短时间内可能无法完成,但是它们积少成多,能够为我们的成长和提升带来巨大的效益。
五分钟法哲学注重效率和专注。
在五分钟内,我们需要专注于某个任务或目标,尽量避免分散注意力。
专注于一个事物能够提高我们的效率,使我们能够更好地完成任务。
比如,我们可以利用五分钟来整理思绪,制定一个明确的计划,然后全身心地投入到这个计划中。
只有在专注的状态下,我们才能够真正地发挥自己的潜力,获得更好的结果。
五分钟法哲学鼓励持续行动。
五分钟虽然短暂,但是如果我们每天都坚持五分钟的行动,长期累积下来,将会产生惊人的效果。
比如,我们可以每天花五分钟进行一项自我反思,总结当天的经验和教训,从而不断提高自己。
或者我们每天花五分钟学习一门外语,积累起来,会让我们的语言能力得到明显的提升。
只有持续行动,我们才能够不断进步,不断超越自我。
五分钟法哲学需要我们有明确的目标和计划。
在五分钟内,我们需要清楚地知道自己要实现什么,该如何行动。
我们可以在每天开始之前,花几分钟来制定一个简单的计划,列出当天要完成的任务和目标。
这样,我们在五分钟内就能够有针对性地行动,而不是盲目地浪费时间。
只有有明确的目标和计划,我们才能够更好地利用五分钟,取得更好的成果。
五分钟法哲学是一种高效利用时间的方法,它强调时间的价值,注重效率和专注,鼓励持续行动,并要求我们有明确的目标和计划。
Harvard Law Review中英对照
Mechanisms of SecrecyHarvard Law Review, Vol. 121, April 2008, No. 6政府保密机制札记《哈佛法律评论》,第一二一卷,二00八年四月,第六号Tr. ChunfengqiushuiTo what extent should the government keep secrets from the people? Government often needs to operate in secret in order to shape and execute socially desirable policies, and excessive transparency requirements can have an ossifying effect that prevents government from responding in innovative ways to changed circumstances.[1] But transparency helps ensure that governmental actors do not misuse their power; a government that is free to operate in secret is free to do both good and bad things without fear of reproach from the voters. Secrecy is in some areas, such as national security, essential to a nation’s ongoing vitality, yet it seems to be strongly in tension with accountability[2]— a necessary element of democracy. There is no easy resolution to this conflict. On one hand are claims such as Cardinal Richelieu’s that “[s]ecrecy is the first essential in affairs of state”;[3] on the other are those like Jeremy Bentham’s assertion that secrecy, being “an instrument of conspiracy[,] . . . ought not, therefore, be the system of a regular government,”[4] or, more recently, the Sixth Circuit’s declaration that “[d]emocracies die behind closed doors.”[5]政府应对人民保密到什么程度?政府经常需要秘密操作以形成社会上期盼的政策并实施这些政策,过分的透明需求将产生僵化效应,使得政府无法以创新的方式应对变化了的环境。
论黑格尔《法哲学原理》中的自由概念
论黑格尔《法哲学原理》中的自由概念摘要:黑格尔始终认为,欧美国家的18世纪发生的巨大变化唤醒了人们关于自由的意识。
《法哲学》的任务是要准确地表明,通过自由,以及其权利层面从自由概念内在地推导出制度会被规定为必然。
本文将以意志以及权利(抽象法)、道德、伦理三个领域为出发点,通过意志以及三个领域的概念变迁和形式进行阐述说明,力求进一步理解黑格尔的自由观。
关键词:黑尔格;自由;意志;法哲学一、“自由”是“精神”的真理“对黑格尔来说,人的自由的主要源泉和要素就是思想。
”[斯蒂芬.霍尔盖特著,丁三东译:《黑格尔导论——自由、真理与历史》,商务印书馆,2013年11月第1版,第38页。
]在社会经济发展的大环境下,物质宗教文化等的实践变化,思想也在社会生活中产生了巨大的作用。
在现代社会中,思维应该通过理性自由自主地体现其全部价值。
思维中包括一些想象以及经验科学,但是,在黑格尔看来,最有权威的仍然是具有理想的思维。
由此,他提出一种无预设的逻辑科学,要求一种完全的、彻底的、有批判性的科学。
对于思想来说,成为真正自由的,也是对过去历史的一个总结和回应。
“我们现在已经完全地意识到了,我们是自由的、自我规定着的是者,并且,我们首先是作为有理性的、思维着的是者才是自由的。
”[同上,第41页。
]这明显的说明思想对于自由的重要性,尤其凸显了思想中的理性对于自由的必要条件。
黑格尔在《历史哲学》中表明自由是其精神哲学的本质:“‘自由’是‘精神’的唯一的真理,乃是思辨的哲学的一种结论。
”[黑格尔著,王造时译:《历史哲学》上海世纪出版集团,2006年版,第16页。
]由此,显示了自由之于精神的地位和作用。
在黑格尔看来,“精神”是人类意识的一种独特形态的体现,“被承认的自由意识,它在另一个自由的自我意识之中有着它自己的自我确定性,它正是在它者中拥有自己的真理的。
”[ 斯蒂芬.霍尔盖特著,丁三东译:《黑格尔导论——自由、真理与历史》,商务印书馆,2013年11月第1版,第125页。
西哲所有哲学家
1AAbelard,Peter(1070—1142) P.阿布拉French medieval logician.Dilectica;Concerning Genera and Species.法国中世纪逻辑学家.(辩证法);《关于种和属》。
Adorno,Theodor W.(1903-69) T.W.阿多尔诺German philosopher Of the Frankfurt Sch001.Dialectic of the Enlightenment (with Horkheimer,1947);Negative Dialectics(1966).德国法兰克福学派哲学家.《启蒙辩证法》(与霍克海默合著,1947);《否定辩证法》(1966).AJdukiewicz,Kazimierz(1890-1963) K.阿吉图库威茨Polish analytical philosopher.Language and Knowledge,2 vols(1960-5).波兰分析哲学家.《语言与知识》(2 卷本,1960—1965).Albert the Great (c.1206—80) 大阿尔伯特Medieval Aristotelian,teacher Of Aquinas.Opera Omnia.中世纪亚里士多德主义者,阿奎那的老师.《小著作》.Albo,Joseph (c.1360-1444) J.阿波Jewish philosopher.The Book of Principle(1425).犹太哲学家.《原理书》(1425).Alexander,Samuel (1859—1938) S.亚历山大Australian-British philosopher of science and of religion.Space,Time and Deity(1920).澳裔英国科学哲学与宗教哲学家.《空间、时间与神性》(1920).Alston,William(1921—) W.阿尔斯通America epistemologist and philosopher of religion.Divine Nature and Human Language (1989),Epistemic Justification (1989).Perceiving God(1991).美国知识沦与宗教哲学家.《神性与人类语言》(1980);《认知辨明》(1989);《知觉神》(1991).Althusser,Louis(1918-90) L.阿尔杜塞French structural Marxist.For Marx(1965).法国结构马克思主义者.《保卫马克思》(1965).Anaxagoras(500-428 BC) 阿那克萨戈拉Pre-Socratic natural Philosopher.前苏格拉底自然哲学家.Anaximandros of Miletus(flourished.c.550 BC) 阿那克西曼德Pre-Socratic natural Philosopher,member of the Ionian School.前苏格拉底自然哲学家,伊奥尼亚学派成员.Anaximenes of Miletus (n.c 550BC) 阿那克西美尼Pre-Socratic natural Philosopher,member of the Ionian School.前苏格拉底自然哲学家,伊奥尼亚学派成员.Anderson,John(1893—1962) J.安德森Scottish-Australian philosopher.Studiesin Empirical Philosophy(1962).苏格兰裔澳大利亚哲学家.《经院哲学研究》(1962).Anscombe, G(ertrude) E (1izalbeth)M(argret)(1919—) C.E.M.安斯康British analytical philosopher .Intention(1957); An Introduction to Wittgenstein'sTractatus(1959);PDF 文件使用"pdfFactory" 试用版本创建2Collected Philosophical Papers(3 vols.1981).英国分析哲学家.《意向》(1957);《维特根斯坦(逻辑哲学论>导论)(1959);《哲学论文集》(3 卷本,1981)。
法律英语课后问题整理
第一单元:LEGAL SYSYTEM主课文:1.The common law tradition originated in England. The decisions of theroyal courts became the law common to the whole kingdom, the common law.2.Both law and equity are part of what is called the common law.3.Louisiana: civil law, the others: common law4.The expression “civil law”, in Latin jus civilis, literally means the law ofthe citizens of Rome. Now the civilian jurists refer to what we call private law simply as “the civil law”( persons, property and obligations)5.In common law countries ,cases are usually considered to be theprimary source of law. In civil law countries, cases are not a source of law.6.Civil law jurists will consider the civil code as an all encompassingdocument. On the contrary in common law jurisdictions legislation tends to be considered as an exception to the case law.7.American legal education is very original and in many respects unique.The case method or Socratic method is peculiar to this country.8.No, only through the postgraduate degree.9.The case method is important in America, in other countries, theteaching style is magisterial—the professor express the law to his orher students, who take notes and do not intervene in class.10.The professors play an important role in defining the law in civil lawsystem, while the judges in the common law system.副课文:1.The decisions of judges ,or of other officials empowered by the constitution or laws of a political entity to hear and decide controversies ,create case law. As the name “case law”suggests, a particular decision ,or a collection of particular decisions ,generate law-that is ,rules of general application.2.From the point of view of parties to a lawsuit or other contested controversy , what matters is the immediate outcome ,the result the tribual reaches in their case .The decision has immediate and special significance. In the view of judges ,lawyers and law students ,however ,the decision takes on broader perspective .The decision becomes a possible source of general applicable case law. 3. In any judicial system rules of law arise sooner or later out of such decisions of cases , as rules of action arise out of the solution of particular problems .These generalizations contained in , or built upon, past decisions ,when taken as normative for future disputes ,create a legal system of precedent……..4.A court that follows precedent mechanically or too strictly will at timesperpetuate legal rules and concepts that have outlived their usefulness.5.The problem is how to maintain an acceptable accommodation of the competing values of stability in a law ,served by adherence to precedent ,and responsiveness to social change ,which may call for the abandonment of an outworn legal doctrine. this problem of stability versus change will be a recurring theme in the casebook6.stare decisis:doctrine of precedent ,as a precedent ,or potential precedent ,for future cases.Res judicata:as an authoritative settlement of a particular controversy then before the court.7.res judicata8.A court of last resort in one state does not consider itself bound to follow another state’s case law rules ,but it will carefully consider the outstate decisions and ,if it finds their reasoning persuasive ,make use of them as sources of guidance and justification.9.However hospitable a court of last resort may be to persuasive authority from other jurisdictions ,an outstate case is not as authoritative and should not be assigned the same force as a true “precedent”.10. The difference in degree of influence is much like the difference between the holding of a case and dictum in a judicial opinion, the“holding”being fully authoritative and generally binding and the “dictum” only ,again ,persuasive authority.第二单元COURT SYSYTEM主课文:1.limited to civil suits involving relatively small amounts of money andto minor violations of the criminal law.2.A court empowered to try all kinds of cases ,without monetary orsubject matter limitation.3.To review the action of the lower judicial tribunals of the state. This isthe exercise of appellate jurisdiction.4.(1)a vast increase in appellate litigation which , particularly in themore populous states , soon led to hopeless congestion of the dockets of the state courts of last resort.(2) empowered to strain out and finally dispose of the bulk ofappellate litigation-cases.5. The landmark statute in the evolution of the federal judicial system.6 .Normally presided over by a single judge , although there are a few situations ,chiefly cases in which injunctions are sought on federal constitutional grounds against the enforcement of state or federal statutes, in which a three-judge court must be convened.7.(1)the jurisdiction of a District Court of the United States must be based either on the character of the controversy or on the character ofparties to the controversy.(2)within one or another of three categories: cases to which the United States is a party, which includes both civil cases in which the United States is plaintiff or defendant and all prosecutions for violation of federal criminal statutes: cases involving a “federal question” ,which means a question involving the interpretation or effect of a provision of the Constitution or of a federal statute or regulation: cases involving “diversity of citizenship”, that is ,suits between citizens of different states of United States.8.federal court: The historical origins of “diversity of citizenship”jurisdiction derive from a concern of former times that a citizen of one state might not be fairly treated in the courts of the state of his adversary’s residence ,and even this old concern is inapplicable when the defendant is ,so to speak, sued on his own home grounds.9.can be secured only by a :petition for a writ of certiorari ”.As a matter of Supreme Court practice ,if four or more of the nine justices vote to take the case, that is , to hear and decide it on its merits, the Court will “grant certiorari.”10. If appeals to the supreme court were available in all cases ,the court would be swamped with ordinary appeals and unable to give full and deliberate consideration to the great cases it must decide with finality as umpire of the federal system, authoritative guardian of theconstitutional liberties and final overseer of the consistency and substantial justice of the general law administered in the courts of the United States.第三单元:CONSTITUTIONAL LAW副课文:1.(1)every court ,federal and state(2)The USA Supreme Court has the final say2.NO. these provisions are organizational and jurisdictional. They create the Supreme Court ,but “supreme” means only “highest”, designating a place ih the hierarchy but not the Court’s authority.3.The power of judicial of review was established by the Court’s decision in the 1803 case of Marbuary v. Madison.4.The constitution is law , Courts interpret law. Therefore courts interpret the Constitution.5.In adopting the Constitution the states had ceded some of their sovereignty to the federal government.第四单元:CRIMINAL LAW主课文:1.Typical forms of punishment include death ,imprisonment , fine ,removal from public office or disqualification from holding public office ,probation ,and restitution.2.(1)Civil violations are often referred to as torts. A society isconsidered to be a wrong against all of society ,whereas a tort is considered to be a private matter between the parties directly involved.(2)The second distinction involves the persons who actually prosecutethe case. A specially designated state prosecutor or federal official directs the proceedings when crimes are involved .However, in tort action the individual against whom the wrong has been commited generally hires an attorney to process the claim.(3)Third, although one who commits a crime may be required toprovide some forms of monetary restitution to society or to the victim, additional punishments are also available. Only fines are available in tort law. Rather, tort restitution relies primarily on monetary compensation.(4)Finally,compensation paid individuals who have sued others incivil courts is called damages.3.Civil damages are categorized as general , special ,and punitive.General damages compensate for any specific and demonstrable harm that has been caused .Special damages involve compensationfor “conscious pain and suffering.”Finally, punitive damages are awarded at the discretion of the jury, or as required by statute, if it is found that the behavior of the actor was the result of an intentional disregarded for the safety or well-being of others.4.Substantive criminal law defines crimes and established publishments. Criminal procedural law outlines the procedures that must be followed. Thus, substantive law informs society as to what behavior is acceptable or unacceptable ,whereas procedural law directs the state as to the proper methods for apprehension and adjudication.5.Miranda warnings. Until the Miranda warnings have been given, however , an individual cannot be lawfully arrested unless the police have probable cause to believe a crime has been or is being commited: That is ,a particular substantive law must first be violated before the state will begin its investigation.6.Felonies , misdemeanors and infractions7.The length or place of punishment often distinguishes a felony froma misdemeanor. Another way to distinguish felonies from misdemeanors is by the so-called in presence rule.8.They are not same, motives is defined as the “cause or reason that moves the will and induces action”. Intent relates to the state of mind at the time of the commission of the unlawful act. Failure to establishan unlawful intent must result in acquittal.9.mens rea , actus reus and causation10.(1)the mere fact that a harm occurs does not necessarily mean a crime has been committed.(2)if a person does not have a legal duty to act and in fact does not act, then that person cannot be held legally accountable for the unlawful acts of others.(3)causation is considered to be the logical coming together of the mens rea and actus reus,resulting in a criminal wrong.第五单元:CRIMINAL PROCEDURE副课文:1.Yes. first the human rights. second, convict innocent means thatyou just do two wrong things.2.The prosecutors. At the end of the presentation of the state’sevidence .the grand jury members vote. Majority rule prevails. 3.An arrest occurs when a peace or police officer takes a suspectinto custody for the purposes of charging the individual with a crime. Arrests may also occur after an official arrest warrant has been issued by a magistrate or judge. The arrest may result from the police officer’s own perception that a crime has been or isabout to be committed .In order to get a warrant ,the official must convince the court that criminal activity has been or is being committed ,since courts may not issue warrants unless there is probable cause that criminal activity is afoot.4.The decision to prosecute largely depends on the strength of thestate’s case against the accused. others:(1)attitude of the victim(2)cost to the system(3)harm to the suspect(4)adequate alternate procedure available and (5)suspect’s willingness to cooperate with law enforcement.5.The magistrate or the preliminary hearing jury. Decide whetherthe state had probable cause to arrest the accused.6.At the arraignment, the accused must make a plea. Thearraignment is important also because the defendant is again informed of the charges , counsel is appointed (if the defendant is indigent), and bail is established.7.The voir dire is the process used to select a jury. The peremptorychallenge ,allows either side to have prospective jurors excused without having to specify a particular reason. The challenge for cause , allows for the exclusion of a juror only if the excluding party (defense or prosecution)demonstrates that the individual cannot be impartial or cannot otherwise handle the responsibility of making a rational decision.8.Typically ,jury instructions are not formulated by the judge ,prosecution, or defense . Rather , “form”instructions are taken from standard jury instruction forms that have met the particular state’s basic requirements .These instructions are designed to be simple enough for the average juror to understand yet complete enough to avoid any potential reversible errors on appeal.9.If a mistrial occurs, the defendant may be required to go throughthe entire process again, since a retrial resulting from a mistrial does not constitute double jeopardy.10.Possible sentences are outlined in the stage statues and areoccasionally determined by the jury but usually by the judge.Sentences may be suspension, probation, jail term, fine, disqualification to hold public office or even capital punishment.第六单元:CIVIL PROCEDURE副课文:1.The lawyer’s first task is to ascertain “the facts”. The facts yourclients alleges can be proved, and that they make a legal violation, you will now have to determine in what court you will “bring your action.”----what court has the jurisdiction.2.(1)do nothing.(2)serve(and/or file in court) a motion to dismissfor failure to state a claim.(3)serve (and/or file) an answer(4)serve(and/or file) an affirmative defense.3.If it is granted , usually the plaintiff will be given an opportunityto “replead”. If the motion to dismiss is denied , and the defendant has, in addition to moving to dismiss, controverted the plaintiffs’ allegations of fact, the case will go to trail. If she does not dispute the facts, there is no need for a trial .The case proceeds directly to judgment , on the law, which may be reviewed on appeal.4.You may have “objections” to the introduction of evidence , forexample , on the ground that the evidence is inadmissible as hear say. If the court, after the defendant’s objection , lets the evidence in, defendant will “except”to the ruling and so preserve her right to challenge the ruling on appeal if the jury verdict goes against her.5.The judge gives her instructions to the jury as to the applicablelaw of the case. What usually happens is that each side draws up draft instructions and submits them to the judge. The judge then looks at the draft instructions submitted by both sides and decides which ones to give to the jury. Each side in the litigation may: (1)except, i.e. , record objections ,to any instruction or part thereof , which he believes is an erroneousstatement of the law; or (2)except to the refusal of the judge to give his instruction.6.Most jury verdicts are general ,a statement of result in somesuch form as “ We, the jury , find for the plaintiff in the sum of $5000”.So-called “special” verdicts , by which the jury answers specific questions of fact submitted to it by the judge ,are becoming more frequent.7.The answer is that we require as a matter of law a minimumamount of evidence to support the jury verdict.8.The usual rule is that a losing party cannot appeal any errors ofthe trial court which he did not call to the trial court’s attention by filing a motion for a new trial.9.Before initiating an action it is important to assess whether thedefendant has the resources ,and the compliance, to satisfy a judgment.10.The focus of the appellate court’s scrutiny is on the correctnessof the rulings of the trial court.第九单元:CONTRACT LAW主课文:1. A contract is promise between two or more personsinvolving the exchange of some goods or service. The resources of America is the case law and the UCC2.In order to prevent fraud on the part of either party in theexchange.3.The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) is the main body oflaw that governs transactions involving goods.4.The “void contract” is a contract held to be void does notexist under law . In other words, although two parties may have come to an agreement , it is not recognized as a legal contract. Voidable contracts are contracts that may be canceled by one of the two parties involved .5. A “quasi-contract”is not an actual contract; it is anon-binding legal mechanism used in special circumstances to prevent one party from being severely harmed or unjustly enriched by an implicit arrangement.6.不当得利7.The essential feature defining these requirements are:“capacity,” “mutual assent”“consideration”8.Persons who are deemed incompetent due to physical ormental illness lack capacity to enter into contracts.9.Mutual assent is demonstrated by “offer” and “acceptance”.10.The essence of consideration is that a party receives somekind of benefit in return for his promise. No consideration ,no valid contract.。
黑格尔法哲学导言每段的解读
黑格尔法哲学导言每段的解读於1785年,德哲家黑格撰了《法哲导言》,部分容涉及法律、道德和宗教,成德古典哲的典代表作之一。
本文通解《法哲导言》中的各段,其中的概念作一一步的挖掘,提取出深意。
黑格在《法哲导言》的第一段,著重法律的值和重要性,即法律有助於定正的行,促正和平等,保利和利益,以及社秩序和定。
因此,法律可以社建和一定的境,人才能在此境中安全而健康地生活。
另一方面,黑格在《法哲导言》的第二段中,指出信信任是法律的基,也是道德的基。
其,信是社展的最重要的一基,它不可以保各社的正常作,也可以法律的存在提供定的基。
信任是建立在信的基之上,它不可以促良性的社互,也可以加利的保,以及提升社公平及社秩序。
此外,黑格在《法哲导言》的第三段中,指出宗教是道德上的基,可以人提供道德指。
其,宗教把人的注意力引向了一更高的境界,人意到可以通助宗教,改善道德面。
宗教可以助人理解自己的存在和身份,且提供宗教道德以正的行,而保社公平和定。
最後,黑格在《法哲导言》的第四段中,指出自然秩序是一自我行,必由社主遵守,以保社定和正行。
其,自然秩序和原入人的日常生活,以免追求个人利益而犯下用或犯罪行。
自然秩序可以提高人的道德水,提供一定的社境,且促正的值和行得到全面普及。
述以上,黑格在《法哲导言》中,指出法律、信、信任、宗教、自然秩序都是社定和展的重要基,也是平等、正和公平的基。
些基可以人提供一安全健康的社境,同也可以提升人的道德水,而正的行及社秩序。
通《法哲导言》每段的解,我可以得出,黑格的法哲思想是有系的,也是有理性的。
他,法律、道德和宗教是彼此密的,互相的。
它的建立及展不可以促公平正,可以人提供一安全定的社境,而到社可持展的目。
法律英语lesson_five
Notes 2
5. …express their will through the ballot box. ballot box n. 投票箱,投票选举 投票箱, 6. malfeasance: 违法行为,渎职行为(罪) 违法行为,渎职行为( malfeasant n.\a.渎职者,违法乱纪者 渎职的,犯罪的 渎职者, 渎职的, 渎职者 违法乱纪者\渎职的 malfeasant administrative act 行政渎职行为 7. Process of impeachment =impeachment proceeding : 弹劾程序 8. Article Ⅱ,section 4 :The President, Vice President and all civil officers of the United States, shall be removed from office on impeachment for, and conviction of, treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors. convict v. 证明 有罪,be convicted of sth 证明…有罪 有罪, conviction n. 法庭认定有罪的判决,定罪 法庭认定有罪的判决, misdemeanor 不是很严重的恶劣行为,轻罪 不是很严重的恶劣行为,
Constitution of the United States
Article VI All debts contracted and engagements entered into, before the adoption of this Constitution, shall be as valid against the United States under this Constitution, as under the Confederation. This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be ; made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, ; anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding. The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the members of the several state legislatures, and all executive and judicial officers, both of the United States and of the several states, shall be bound by oath or affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no ; religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.
哈佛大学公开课程-JUSTICE中英
哈佛大学公开课程-JUSTICEIntroduction哈佛大学公开课程-JUSTICE(公正)是哈佛大学著名哲学教授迈克尔·桑德尔斯(Michael Sandel)于2009年开设的一门课程。
JUSTICE课程探讨了道德和政治哲学中的核心问题,涵盖了伦理学、政治学、经济学和法学等多个学科领域。
这门课程通过案例分析和讨论来引导学生思考公正和道德问题,以期培养学生的批判性思维和逻辑推理能力。
Course StructureJUSTICE课程共分为12个单元,每个单元探讨一个基本问题,例如财富分配、权力、正义、人权等。
每个单元都包括教授的讲座、案例分析和学生的互动讨论环节。
这种教学方式旨在激发学生的积极参与,并通过讨论不同观点来促进学生的思考和辩论能力。
Course Highlights1. 公正的本质第一个单元的讨论着重探索公正的本质和意义。
课程将引导学生思考什么是公正,以及如何在不同背景下实现公正。
通过讨论相关案例,学生将了解不同的伦理观点和社会背景如何影响对公正的理解。
2. 平等与不平等第二个单元将探讨平等和不平等的问题。
课程将引导学生思考在不同领域如教育、财富和机会等中,平等的界定和实现。
通过讨论实际情况,学生将了解不同社会政策对平等与不平等的影响。
3. 个体权利与公共权利第三个单元将引导学生思考个体权利与公共权利之间的平衡。
课程将探讨当个人权利与公共利益存在冲突时,应如何权衡和解决。
通过分析真实案例,学生将学习如何判断个体权利与公共权利之间的关系。
4. 国际正义第四个单元将重点讨论国际正义的问题。
课程将引导学生思考国际关系中的公正和不公正现象,并探讨全球治理和政策制定中的道德问题。
通过讨论不同国家之间的争议和冲突,学生将了解不同国家之间的权力关系和利益冲突。
5. 公正与超越第五个单元将探讨超越公正的问题。
课程将引导学生思考公正的局限性和其他价值观的重要性。
通过引入宗教、道德和文化等方面的讨论,学生将思考公正之外的价值观在社会中的作用。
(完整word版)哈佛公开课-公正课-第五课双语字幕
公正课\N迈克尔·桑德尔教授主讲第五讲《选择的自由》上节课结束时\When we finished last time,我们讲到约翰·斯图尔特·穆勒试图回应\we were looking at John Stuart Mill's attempt to reply对边沁功利主义的批判\to the critics of Bentham's Utilitarianism.在穆勒的《功利主义》中\In his book Utilitarianism,他试图证明与批判者所言相反\Mill tries to show that critics to the contrary在功利主义的框架下\it is possible within the utilitarian framework是能区分高级和低级快乐的\to distinguish between higher and lower pleasures.是能对价值进行定性区分的\It is possible to make qualitative distinctions of worth.我们用《辛普森一家》\And we tested that idea和莎士比亚作品检验了这一观点\with the Simpsons and the Shakespeare excerpts.检验结果\And the results of our experiment却似乎让我们质疑穆勒的区分\seem to call into question Mill's distinction因为在座大多数\because a great many of you都表示更喜欢《辛普森一家》\reported that you prefer the Simpsons却仍然认为莎士比亚的作品\but that you still consider Shakespeare能带来更高级更有价值的快乐\to be the higher or the worthier pleasure.这就是我们的检验中穆勒的观点所遭遇的困境\That's the dilemma with which our experiment confronts Mill.那么穆勒在《功利主义》\What about Mill's attempt to account第五章中提到的\for the especially weighty character of个人权利和公正重要性的解释又是否成立呢\individual rights and justice in chapter five of Utilitarianism.他想说明个人权利\He wants to say that individual rights值得特别的尊重\are worthy of special respect.实际上他甚至声称\In fact, he goes so far as to say that公正是道德中最神圣\justice is the most sacred part和最不可或缺的部分\and the most incomparably binding part of morality.但穆勒的这番辩护面临着同样质疑\But the same challenge could be put to this part of Mill's defense.为何公正是道德中最主要\Why is justice the chief part最不可或缺的部分\and the most binding part of our morality?他说因为从长远看\Well, he says because in the long run,如果我们秉持公正尊重权利\if we do justice and if we respect rights,社会整体会发展得更好\society as a whole will be better off in the long run.这能令人信服吗\Well, what about that?如果有个特例\What if we have a case where making an exception侵犯个人权利\and violating individual rights actually长远来看反而让人们获益更多呢\will make people better off in the long run?那样就可以利用人了吗\Is it all right then to use people?还有另一个能更深入地\And there is a further objection驳斥穆勒有关公正和权利的观点\that could be raised against Mill's case for justice and rights.假设如他所说长远来看\Suppose the utilitarian calculus in the long run功利主义演算真能实现\works out as he says it will即尊重个人权利\such that respecting people's rights从长远来看真的能让大家都获益\is a way of making everybody better off in the long run.这理由说得过去吗\Is that the right reason?这就是我们该尊重别人的唯一理由吗\Is that the only reason to respect people?如果那位医生\If the doctor goes in偷摘走那位来体检的\and yanks the organs from the healthy patient健康人的器官\who came in for a checkup去挽救另外五人\to save five lives,这事从长远来看会有负面影响\there would be adverse effects in the long run.人们终会得知此事\Eventually, people would learn about this而不再去医院体检\and would stop going in for checkups.这理由说得过去吗\Is it the right reason?这就是唯一原因\Is the only reason让你作为医生\that you as a doctor不会偷摘取体检病人的器官吗\won't yank the organs out of the healthy patient因为你认为如果你这样利用他\that you think, well, if I use him in this way,长远来看会导致更多人丧命\in the long run more lives would be lost?还是有另一原因\Or is there another reason这其实跟在本质上尊重每个个体有关\having to do with intrinsic respect for the person as an individual?如果其中确有这一原因\And if that reason matters那隐约可以看出\and it's not so clear即便是穆勒的功利主义也考虑了这点\that even Mill's utilitarianism can take account of it,为了全面检视对穆勒的这两点\fully to examine these two worries or objections,质疑或担忧\to Mill's defense我们需要更进一步\we need to push further.我们要问就更高的或更有价值的快乐而言\And we need to ask in the case of higher or worthier pleasures是否存在"良善生活"的理论\are there theories of the good life that能为快乐的价值\can provide independent moral standards提供独立的道德标准\for the worth of pleasures?如果存在那会是怎样的理论\If so, what do they look like?这是一个问题\That's one question.就公正和权利而言如果我们怀疑\In the case of justice and rights, if we suspect that穆勒其实也隐约靠向了个人尊严\Mill is implicitly leaning on notions of human dignity或尊重个人的观点\or respect for person而严格说来这不属于功利主义范畴\that are not strictly speaking utilitarian,我们就需要看看\we need to look to see有没有更强有力的权利理论\whether there are some stronger theories of rights能解释穆勒的这点隐约的直觉\that can explain the intuition which even Mill shares,即尊重个人不利用个人的理由\the intuition that the reason for respecting individuals and not using them甚至胜过了长远看来的功利\goes beyond even utility in the long run.今天我们讨论其中一项强有力的权利理论\Today, we turn to one of those strong theories of rights.这些强有力的权利理论认为\Strong theories of rights say个人很重要不仅仅是用来\individuals matter not just as instruments实现更高社会目标的工具\to be used for a larger social purpose或为了实现功利最大化的工具\or for the sake of maximizing utility,个人是独立的存在\individuals are separate beings有独立的生命值得尊重\with separate lives worthy of respect.这些强有力的权利理论认为\And so it's a mistake,下列看法是错误的\according to strong theories of rights, it's a mistake不该只以偏好和价值的加总\to think about justice or law来考虑公正或法律\by just adding up preferences and values.我们今天要讨论的权利理论是自由主义\The strong rights theory we turn to today is libertarianism.自由主义非常重视个人权利\Libertarianism takes individual rights seriously.它被称为自由主义\It's called libertarianism是因为它宣称个人的基本权利是自由权\because it says the fundamental individual right is the right to liberty就因为我们都是独立存在的个体\Precisely because we are separate individual beings,我们不能被利用\we're not available to any use去满足社会可能的需求\that the society might desire or devise就因为我们是独立存在的个体\Precisely because we are individual separate human beings,我们享有自由的基本权利\we have a fundamental right to liberty,即我们有权自由选择\and that means a right to choose freely,过自己喜欢的生活\to live our lives as we please只要尊重他人同等的权利\provided we respect other people's rights to do the same.这是它的基本理念\That's the fundamental idea.罗伯特·诺齐克\Robert Nozick,本课涉及到的一位自由主义哲学家\one of the libertarian philosophers we read是这样说的\for this course, puts it this way:个人有权利\Individuals have rights.这些权利如此强大如此深远\So strong and far reaching are these rights以至引发一个问题如果有的话政府可以做什么\that they raise the question of what, if anything, the state may do.自由主义对于政府或国家的角色\So what does libertarianism say有什么看法呢\about the role of government or of the state?大部分当代政府所做的三种事\Well, there are three things that most modern states do在自由主义理论看来是不合法\that on the libertarian theory of rights不公正的\are illegitimate or unjust.第一家长式的立法\One of them is paternalist legislation.即制定保护人们免受自身行为伤害的法律\That's passing laws that protect people from themselves,诸如系安全带骑摩托车带头盔的法规\seatbelt laws, for example, or motorcycle helmet laws.自由主义者说系安全带也许是件好事\The libertarian says it may be a good thing if people wear seatbelts但这应由人们自己作主\but that should be up to them政府没有资格\and the state, the government, has no business用法律来强迫人们系安全带\coercing them, us, to wear seatbelts by law.这是强迫\It's coercion,所以第一点不应有家长式的立法\so no paternalist legislation, number one.第二点不应有道德式的立法\Number two, no morals legislation.很多法律试图提高公民的品德\Many laws try to promote the virtue of citizens或者试图树立\or try to give expression to the moral values整个社会的道德标准\of the society as a whole.自由主义者说这也违反了个人的自由权\Libertarian say that's also a violation of the right to liberty.举一个经典的例子\Take the example of, well, a classic example以弘扬传统道德之名立法\of legislation authored in the name of promoting morality 历来都有法律\traditionally have been laws禁止同性恋性行为\that prevent sexual intimacy between gays and lesbians.自由主义者认为\The libertarian says其他人没有因此受到伤害也没被侵权\nobody else is harmed,nobody else's rights are violated,所以政府不应该插手此事\so the state should get out of the business entirely of不该试图立法弘扬道德\trying to promote virtue or to enact morals legislation.第三种不被自由主义认同的\And the third kind of law or policy法律或政策是\that is ruled out on the libertarian philosophy任何为了劫富济贫进行收入或财富再分配\is any taxation or other policy that serves the purpose而制定的税收或其他政策\of redistributing income or wealth from the rich to the poor.仔细想想再分配这个概念\Redistribution is a - if you think about it,按自由主义者的话来说就是强迫\says the libertarian is a kind of coercion.它相当于政府施行的盗窃\What it amounts to is theft by the state若是民主政府的话则是大多数人施行的盗窃\or by the majority, if we're talking about a democracy,其对象是工作出色而赚得大钱的人\from people who happen to do very well and earn a lot of money.诺齐克和其他自由主义者认为\Now, Nozick and other libertarians allow that可以有这样一种"小政府"\there can be a minimal state它的税收只用来提供所有人都需要的服务\that taxes people for the sake of what everybody needs,包括国防治安\the national defense, police force,强制履约和保护产权的司法系统\judicial system to enforce contracts and property rights,不过仅此而已\but that's it.我想听听你们对\Now, I want to get your reactions自由主义第三种观点的态度\to this third feature of the libertarian view.看看你们当中谁赞同\I want to see who among you agree with that idea谁不赞同以及为什么\and who disagree and why.但为了更形象看看问题何在\But just to make it concrete and to see what's at stake,以美国的财富分配状况为例\consider the distribution of wealth in the United States.在所有发达的民主国家之中\United States is among the most inegalitarian society as far as{\an8}{\fn方正黑体简体\fs18\b1\bord1\shad1\3c&H2F2F2F&}该图为美国10%的人口占据了70%的社会财富美国财富分配不均的问题最为严重\the distribution of wealth of all the advanced democracies.这样是否公平\Now, is this just or unjust?自由主义者们怎么说\Well, what does the libertarian say?他们说你不能仅从这个事实来判断\Libertarian says you can't know just from the facts I've just given you.你无法判断财富分配是否公平\You can't know whether that distribution is just or unjust.你不能仅凭分配格局\You can't know just by looking at a pattern或分配结果\or a distribution or result来判断其是否公平\whether it's just or unjust.你得知道它是怎么来的\You have to know how it came to be.不能只关注最终结果\Y ou can't just look at the end stage or the result.{\an8}诺齐克收入分配怎样才公平你得考虑两个原则\You have to look at two principles.第一个原则诺齐克称之最初占有的公正原则\The first he calls justice in acquisition or in initial holdings.这很简单就是说\And what that means simply is人们是否公平地获得生产资料\did people get the things they used to make their money fairly?我们需要了解最初的占有是否来得公平\So we need to know was there justice in the initial holdings?让他们赚到钱的土地工厂或者商品\Did they steal the land or the factory or the goods这些生产资料是不是偷来的\that enabled them to make all that money?如果不是偷来的如果他们\If not, if they were entitled to whatever it was有权享有那些生产资料\that enabled them to gather the wealth,那就算符合第一条原则\the first principle is matched.第二条原则财富的分配是否\The second principle is did the distribution arise基于自由达成的交易\from the operation of free consent,基于自由市场的买卖\people buying and trading on the market?可以看出自由主义眼中的公平\As you can see, the libertarian idea of justice相当于自由市场理念下的公平\corresponds to a free market conception of justice 只要生产资料的获取是公平的\provided people got what they used fairly,不是偷来的\didn't steal it,只要分配的结果是出自\and provided the distribution results自由市场上个体的自由选择\from the free choice of individual's buying and selling things,这样的分配就是公平的\the distribution is just.反之则不公平\And if not, it's unjust.为了进一步限定讨论的话题\So let's, in order to fix ideas for this discussion,我们举个真实的例子\take an actual example.美国最有钱的人是谁\Who's the wealthiest person in the United States -全世界最有钱的人是谁比尔·盖茨\wealthiest person in the world? Bill Gates.的确是没错这就是他\It is. That's right. Here he is.要是你你也会很开心的\You'd be happy, too.他的净资产有多少有人知道吗\Now, what's his net worth? Anybody have any idea?{\an8}{\fn方正黑体简体\fs18\b1\bord1\shad1\3c&H2F2F2F&}净资产400亿美元[《福布斯》2009年数据]数字非常巨大\That's a big number.克林顿当政期间\During the Clinton years,有个竞价捐款记得吧\remember there was a controversy donors?参与的大手笔捐款人都被邀请\Big campaign contributors were invited to在白宫的林肯卧室留宿一晚\stay overnight in the Lincoln bedroom at the White House?你要是捐到2.5万美元以上也可以啊\I think if you've contributed twenty five thousand dollars or above.有人算出来\Someone figured out at按能受邀在林肯卧室留宿一夜\the median contribution that got you invited所需捐款额的中位数计算\to stay a night in the Lincoln bedroom,比尔·盖茨完全付得起在林肯卧室\Bill Gates could afford to stay in the Lincoln bedroom every night住上6万6千年\for the next sixty six thousand years.还有人算出了\Somebody else figured out,他一个小时能挣多少钱\how much does he get paid on an hourly basis?他们算出自从他创立了微软\And so they figured out, since he began Microsoft,假设他每天工作14个小时合理的猜测\I suppose he worked, what 14 hours per day, reasonable guess,然后你算算他的净资产\and you calculate this net wealth,结果算出他的工资率在150美元以上\it turns out that his rate of pay is over 150 dollars,不是每小时也不是每分钟\not per hour, not per minute而是每秒钟150美元以上\150 dollars, more than 150 dollars per second这意味着如果盖茨在上班路上\which means that if on his way to the office,就算看到地上有一张百元大钞\Gates noticed a hundred dollar bill on the street,都不值得他停下来去捡\it wouldn't be worth his time to stop and pick it up.你们很多人会说\Now, most of you will say这么有钱的人我们当然可以向他收税\someone that wealthy surely we can tax them以满足那些得不到教育\to meet the pressing needs of people who lack in education 缺乏食物或者无家可归者的迫切需求\or lack enough to eat or lack decent housing.他们比他更需要这些钱\They need it more than he does.如果你是个功利主义者你会怎么办\And if you were a utilitarian, what would you do?你会制定怎样的税收政策\What tax policy would you have?你会马上进行再分配对吧\You'd redistribute in a flash, wouldn't you?因为作为一个优秀的功利主义者你知道\Because you would know being a good utilitarian that收走一些对他们来说根本无关痛痒的钱\taking some, a small amount, he'd scarcely going to notice it,却能大大改善社会底层那些人的生活\but it will make a huge improvement in the lives增加他们的福利\and in the welfare of those at the bottom.但是记住\But remember,自由主义理论说\the libertarian theory says我们不能那样\we can't just add up简单加总偏好和满足\an aggregate preferences and satisfactions that way.我们必须要尊重个人\We have to respect persons and如果他公平地赚到钱\if he earned that money fairly没有侵犯到他人权利\without violating anybody else's rights完全遵守了那两条公正原则\in accordance with the two principles最初占有公正原则和转让公正原则\of justice in acquisition and in justice in transfer,那么向他多征税就是错的\then it would be wrong,这无异于强取豪夺\it would be a form of coercion to take it away.迈克尔·乔丹没有比尔·盖茨那么富有\Michael Jordan is not as wealthy as Bill Gates但他也自有一番成就\but he did pretty well for himself.想看迈克尔·乔丹这就是他\You wanna see Michael Jordan. There he is.他一年的收入有3100万\His income alone in one year was 31 million dollars另外他为耐克和其他公司代言\and then he made another 47 million dollars又能赚4700万\in endorsements for a Nike and other companies.所以他一年的总收入有7800万\So his income was, in one year, $78 million.假设让他拿出三分之一的收入\To require him to pay, let's say, a third of his earnings交给政府来支持公益事业\to the government to support good causes为穷人提供食物医疗保障住房和教育\like food and health care and housing and education for the poor,这就是强迫是不公平的\that's coercion, that's unjust.侵犯了他的权利\That violates his rights.正因如此再分配是错误的\And that's why redistribution is wrong.有多少人同意自由主义者的这一驳论\Now, how many agree with that argument,认为为了帮助穷人\agree with the libertarian argument that redistribution进行财富再分配不对\for the sake of trying to help the poor is wrong?有多少人不同意这个观点\And how many disagree with that argument?好我们先从那些不同意的人开始\All right, let's begin with those who disagree.自由主义者反对再分配怎么不对了\What's wrong with the libertarian case against redistribution?请说\Yes.received在社会中工作\we're talking about working within a society他们从社会中得到的更多\and they received larger gift from the society因此他们该承担更大的责任\and they have a larger obligation通过财富再分配来回报社会\in return to give that through redistribution, you know,你可以说乔丹也许和那些\you can say that Michael Jordan may work just as hard as some who works,一天洗12甚至14小时衣服的人一样辛苦\you know, doing laundry 12 hours, 14 hours a day,但他得到的更多\but he's receiving more.如果说这都是靠他自己辛苦挣来的\I don't think it's fair to say that, you know, it's all on him,是他天赋所赐我觉得这不算公平\on his, you know, inherent, you know, hard work.好我们来听听自由主义者的辩护\All right, let's hear from defenders oflibertarianism.为何向富人征税救济穷人在原则上是错的\Why would it be wrong in principle to tax the rich to help the poor?说吧\Go ahead.我名叫乔我收集滑板\My name is Joe and I collect skateboards.我已经买了100个滑板了\I've since bought a hundred skateboards.我居住的社区有一百人\I live in a society of a hundred people.我是唯一有滑板的人\I'm the only one with skateboards.突然大家都想要滑板了\Suddenly, everyone decides they want a skateboard.他们跑到我家来\They come to my house,拿走了我的99个滑板\they take my they take 99 of my skateboards.我觉得这是不公平的\I think that is unjust.我认为在某些情况下\Now, I think in certain circumstances我们需要忽视这种不公平\it becomes necessary to overlook that unjustness,容忍这种不正义\perhaps condone that injustice例如在救生艇里被当作食物的男孩\as in the case of the cabin boy being killed for food.如果人们在死亡边缘挣扎\If people are on the verge of dying,也许忽视这样的不公平是必要的\perhaps it is necessary to overlook that injustice,但我认为即使这样我们依然要铭记\but I think it's important to keep in mind 我们的行为不公正\that we're still committing injustice这是在占有他人的财物或资产\by taking people's belongings or assets.你是说按33%a 33 percent tax rate来支持公益事业解决温饱是盗窃行为吗\for good causes to feed the hungry is theft?我觉得这不公正\I think it's unjust.我确实认为这是盗窃\Y es, I do believe it's theft但也许我们有必要容忍它\but perhaps it is necessary to condone that theft.但它依然是盗窃\But it's theft.是的\Yes.为什么是盗窃呢乔\Why is it theft, Joe?因为\Because --为什么这和你收集滑板有相同之处呢\Why is it like your collection of skateboards?这是盗窃是因为至少在我看来\It's theft because, or at least, in my opinion在自由主义者的观点看来\and by the libertarian opinion他公平地取得收入这些收入都是属于他的\he earned that money fairly and it belongs to him.拿走他的收入毫无疑问就是盗窃\So to take it from him is by definition theft.有人想反驳乔吗你请说\Who wants to reply to Joe? Yes, go ahead.我觉得他的例子不恰当\I don't think this is necessarily a case不是你有99个滑板而政府...\in which you have 99 skateboards and the government...或你有100个滑板\or you have a hundred skateboards而政府收走99个\and the government is taking 99 of them.恰当的例子是你的滑板多到\It's like you have more skateboards每天用一个都不重样\than there are days in a year.你的滑板多到\You have more skateboards一辈子也用不完\than you're going to be able to use in your entire lifetime而政府只是拿走其中的一些\and the government is taking part of those.如果你生活在一个那样的社会\And I think that if you are operating in a society in which这个社会中\the government's not,政府不进行财富再分配\in which the government doesn't redistribute wealth,就等于允许一些人无限累积过多的财富\then that allows for people to amass so much wealth以至于那些不在同一起跑线的人\that people who haven't started from this very the equal footing当然这只是假设\in our hypothetical situation,现实中是不存在的\that doesn't exist in our real society他们将余生都将没有机会翻身\get undercut for the rest of their lives.所以你担心\So you're worried that如果没有一定程度的再分配\if there isn't some degree of redistribution of some 照顾社会底层\or left at the bottom,就不会有名副其实的机会均等\there will be no genuine equality of opportunity.很好关于税收是盗窃这个观点\All right, the idea that taxation is theft,诺齐克要更进一步\Nozick takes that point one step further.他同意这是盗窃而且比乔苛刻\He agrees that it's theft. He's more demanding than Joe.乔说这是盗窃但在极端情况下也许可以原谅\Joe says it is theft, maybe in an extreme case it's justified,例如为了养活饥饿的家人\maybe a parent is justified in stealing a loaf of bread而去偷面包的家长\to feed his or her hungry family.乔你会如何称呼自己\So Joe I would say, what would you call yourself,慈悲的自由主义者吗\a compassionate quasi-libertarian?仔细想想\Nozick says, if you think about it,诺齐克说征税相当于强占收入\taxation amounts to the taking of earnings.换句话说就是\In other words, it means强占劳动果实\taking the fruits of my labor.但如果政府有权\But if the state has the right强占我的收入或劳动果实\to take my earning or the fruits of my labor,这在道义上不就等同于\isn't that morally the same政府有权\as according to the state the right让我做部分义务劳动吗\to claim a portion of my labor?所以实际上\So taxation actually征税道义上等同于强迫劳动\is morally equivalent to forced labor因为强迫劳动会强占我的\because forced labor involves the taking of闲暇时间还有努力\my leisure, my time, my efforts,就像征税会强占我的劳动所得一样\just as taxation takes the earnings that I make with my labor.所以对诺齐克和其他自由主义者来说\And so, for Nozick and for the libertarians,再分配的税收是盗窃就像乔说的\taxation for redistribution is theft, as Joe says,但不仅如此\but not only theft is morally equivalent盗窃还在道义上等同于\to laying claim to certain hours强占生命和劳动的时间\of a person's life and labor,因此等于强迫劳动\so it's morally equivalent to forced labor.如果政府有权强占我的劳动果实\If the state has a right to claim the fruits of my labor,这就说明它确实有权强迫我劳动\that implies that it really has an entitlement to my labor itself.什么是强迫劳动\And what is forced labor?诺齐克指出强迫劳动就是奴役\Forced labor, Nozick points out, is what, is slavery,因为如果我连对自己劳动的独占权都没有\because if I don't have the right, the sole right to my own labor,这就说明\then that's really to say政府或是政治共同体\that the government or the political community是我的部分主人\is a part owner in me.政府是我的部分主人又意味着什么呢\And what does it mean for the state to be a part owner in me?仔细想想这就意味着我是一个奴隶\If you think about it, it means that I'm a slave,我不是自己的主人\that I don't own myself.这些推理把我们带回到\So what this line of reasoning brings us to自由主义的权利主张\is the fundamental principle所隐含的基本原则\that underlies the libertarian case for rights.那是什么原则呢\What is that principle?我是我自己主人的原则\It's the idea that I own myself.是尊重人权\It's the idea of self possession自然会接受自我拥有的原则\if you want to take right seriously.如果你不想只把人看成是各种偏好的集合\If you don't want to just regard people as collections of preferences,那你必将走向\the fundamental moral idea这一基本道德理念\to which you will be lead is the idea我们是自己的主人\that we are the owners or the propietors of our own person,功利主义的问题就出在这里\and that's why utilitarianism goes wrong.这也是为什么\And that's why it's wrong摘取健康人的器官是错的\to yank the organs from that healthy patient.你这么做仿佛他的器官属于你或这个社会\Y ou're acting as if that patient belongs to you or to the community.但我们只属于我们自己\But we belong to ourselves.也正是出于这一理由\And that's the same reason才不该制定法律保护我们免受自己伤害\that it's wrong to make laws to protect us from ourselves或告诉我们该如何生活\or to tell us how to live,该秉持怎样的道德规范\to tell us what virtues we should be governed by,rich to help the poor就算是为了公益事业\even for good causes,就算是为了帮助卡特里娜飓风的灾民\even to help those who are displaced by the Hurricane Katrina.请富人去搞慈善活动吧\Ask them to give charity.但如果对他们征税就成了强迫劳动\But if you tax them, it's like forcing them to labor.你能强迫乔丹放弃下周的比赛\Could you tell Michael Jordan he has to skip the next week's games必须下灾区去帮助卡特里娜飓风的灾民吗\and go down to help the people displaced by Hurricane Katrina?道义上说两者是一样\Morally, it's the same.因此利害关系很分明的\So the stakes are very high.我们现在已经听了一些对自由主义的反对声\So far we've heard some objections to the libertarian argument.。
学术英语_社科Unit5五单元原文及翻译
UNIT 5 Sociology Matters1.Culture is the totality of learned,socially transmitted customs,knowledge,material objects,and behavior.It includes the ideas,values,customs,and artifacts of groups of people.Though culture differ in their customs,artifacts,and languages,they all share certain basic characteristics.Furthermore,cultural characteristics change as cultures develop ,and cultures infuence one another through their technological ,commercial, and artistic achievements.文化是指社会传播学,海关,知识,材料的对象,和行为。
它包括思想,价值观,习俗,和人群的文物。
尽管文化在他们的习俗,文物,和语言不同,但是他们都有一些共同的基本特性。
此外,当文化发展时文化特征也在变化,并且文化通过他们的技术,商业,艺术成就相互影响。
Cultural universals文化共性2.All societies,despite their differences,have developed certain general practices known as cultural universals.Many cultural universals are ,in fact,adaptations to meet essential human needs ,such as people’s need for food ,shelter,and clothing. Anthropologist George murdock compiled a list of cultural that included athletic sports, cooking ,funeral ceremonies,medicine,and sexual restrictions.所有的社会,尽管他们的差别,已经形成了一定的一般做法被称为文化的共性。
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First Minute
‘An order is an order’, the soldier is told. ‘A law is a law’, says the jurist.
The soldier, however, is required neither by duty nor by law to obey an order whose object he knows to be a felony or a misdemeanor, while the jurist—since the last of the natural lawyers died out a hundred years ago—recognizes no such exceptions to the validity of a law or to the requirement of obedience by those subject to it. A law is valid because it is a law, and it is a law if, in the general run of cases, it has the pos view of a law and of its validity (we call it the positivistic theory) has rendered jurists and the people alike defenceless against arbitrary, cruel, or criminal laws, however extreme they might be. In the end, the positivistic theory equates law with power; there is law only where there is power.
In the language of faith, the same thoughts are recorded in two verses from the Bible. It is written that you are to be obedient to the authorities who have power over you,1 but it is also written that you are to obey God rather than men2—and this is not simply a pious wish, but a valid legal proposition. A solution to the tension between these two directives cannot be found by appealing to a third—say, to the dictum: ‘Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s’.3 For this directive, too, leaves the dividing line in doubt. Or, rather, it leaves the solution to the voice of God, which speaks to the conscience of the individual only in the
Fourth Minute
Of course it is true that the public benefit, along with justice, is an objective of the law. And of course laws have value in and of themselves, even bad laws: the value, namely, of securing the law against uncertainty. And of course it is true that, owing to human imperfection, the three values of the law—public benefit, legal certainty, and justice—are not always united harmoniously in laws, and the only recourse, then, is to weigh whether validity is to be granted even to bad, harmful, or unjust laws for the sake of legal certainty, or whether validity is to be withheld because of their injustice or social harmfulness. One thing, however, must be indelibly impressed on the consciousness of the people as well as of jurists: There can be laws that are so unjust and so socially harmful that validity, indeed legal character itself,
particular case.
Notes
* ‘Fünf Minuten Rechtsphilosophie’, first published in the Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung (Heidelberg), 12 September 1945, repr. inter alia in Gustav Radbruch, Gesamtausgabe (Collected Works), 20 vols, Arthur Kaufmann (ed.), vol. 3: Rechtsphilosophie III, Winfried Hassemer (ed.) (Heidelberg: C. F. Müller, 1990) 78–9; in Radbruch, Rechtsphilosophie, Studienausgabe, Ralf Dreier and Stanley L. Paulson (eds) (Heidelberg: C. F. Müller, 2nd edn, 2003) 209–10, 234 (editors’ notes); in Radbruch, Rechtsphilosophie, 4th–7th edns, Erik Wolf (ed.), 8th edn, Erik Wolf and Hans-Peter Schneider (eds) (Stuttgart: K. F. Koehler, 1950–73); and under the title ‘Rechtsphilosophische Besinnung’ in Radbruch, Der Mensch im Recht, Fritz von Hippel (ed.) (G?ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1957) 105–7.
Third Minute
Law is the will to justice. Justice means: To judge without regard to the person, to measure everyone by the same standard.
If one applauds the assassination of political opponents, or orders the murder of people of another race, all the while meting out the most cruel and degrading punishment for the same acts committed against those of one’s own persuasion, this is neither justice nor law. If laws deliberately betray the will to justice—by, for example, arbitrarily granting and withholding human rights—then these laws lack validity, the people owe them no obedience, and jurists, too, must find the courage to deny them legal character.
must be denied them.
Fifth Minute
There are principles of law, therefore, that are weightier than any legal enactment, so that a law in conflict with them is devoid of validity. These principles are known as natural law or the law of reason. To be sure, their details remain open to question, but the work of centuries has in fact established a solid core of them, and they have come to enjoy such far-reaching consensus in the so-called declarations of human and civil rights that only the dogmatic sceptic could still entertain doubts about some of them.