CRUET (Jean)
    THE LIFE OF LAW AND THE POWERLESSNESS OF LAWS, coll. Bibl. de philo. scientif.
Édition :
    Paris
Date :
    1908
    in-8, br., (cover soiled, paper slightly yellowed), 344 p.
    This text comes from the Flammarion library of scientific philosophy, which was a breeding ground for the most important scientific and technical thought at the turn of the century. It notably published the works of Poincaré, Le Dentec, Le Bon, and others. It also published several legal works devoted to the transformations of law, some of which deserve to be rediscovered today. This is the case with the text presented here, which constitutes a remarkably insightful reflection, in the tradition of Duguit, on the shortcomings of the conception of law as an expression of the general will. The author challenges the dogmatic conceptions of the jurists of the Third Republic and undertakes a stimulating analysis of the function of illegality in the evolution of law.

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