A) A priori structures of legal entities B) Economic analysis of legal systems C) Comparative study of common law D) Historical development of Roman law
A) American pragmatism B) British empiricism C) Logical positivism D) Phenomenology
A) Early legal systems B) Prior court decisions C) Necessary structures independent of experience D) Basic legal principles
A) Jeremy Bentham B) John Locke C) Karl Marx D) Edmund Husserl
A) Private law B) Criminal law C) Constitutional law D) International law
A) Social acts create legal entities B) No necessary connection C) They are identical concepts D) Legal entities restrict social acts
A) 1925 B) 1938 C) 1901 D) 1913
A) A priori claim and obligation relations B) Economic dependencies C) Social status hierarchies D) Only psychological expectations
A) Law is applied morality B) They are identical C) No relationship exists D) They are distinct but related domains
A) Latin B) French C) German D) English
A) German Civil Law B) Roman Law exclusively C) English Common Law D) International Law
A) The creation of claim and obligation B) The cultural context C) The economic value D) The exact words used
A) A priori structures derive from positive law B) Positive law presupposes a priori structures C) They conflict necessarily D) No relationship exists
A) Psychological constructs B) Economic necessities C) Social conventions D) Apriori objects
A) Property transfer B) Promise C) Tort D) Contract
A) Ideal objects B) Social facts C) Fictional constructs D) Material objects
A) Through authority B) Through sensory experience C) Through essential intuition D) Through logical deduction
A) A legislative act B) Social recognition C) A court decision D) A promise |