Evolution and the Common Law

Cambridge University Press (2005)
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Abstract

This book offers a radical challenge to accounts of the common law's development. Contrary to received jurisprudential wisdom, it maintains there is no grand theory which will explain satisfactorily the dynamic interactions of change and stability in the common law's history. Offering original readings of Charles Darwin's and Hans-Georg Gadamer's works, the book shows that law is a rhetorical activity that can only be properly appreciated in its historical and political context; tradition and transformation are locked in a mutually reinforcing but thoroughly contingent embrace. In contrast to the dewy-eyed offerings of much contemporary work, it demonstrates that, like life, law is an organic process rather than a miraculous one. In short, common law is a perpetual work-in-progress - evanescent, dynamic, messy, productive, tantalising, and bottom-up.

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Allan Hutchinson
York University

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Science, Philosophy and the Return of Time: Reflections on Speculative Thought.Matthew McManus - 2017 - Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy 13 (3):238-262.

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