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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "jurisprudence" in a sentence

    jurisprudence example sentences

    jurisprudence


    1. The army officers have done splendid work, but it has yet to be proved that a military training fits men for the reconstruction of a system of jurisprudence suitable for a Latin society, the administration of the revenue, or dealing with the intricate economic and financial problems and the adjustment of currency, to be faced by the people in Cuba


    2. In American law schools critical theory and its progeny, feminist jurisprudence, reject the very concepts of reason and logic upon which America and the whole of Western society are founded


    3. Hadley Arkes, professor of jurisprudence at Amherst College, compares that view to “ancient fallacies,” as he calls them, such as scientism


    4. We will not detour here to delve into the legal issues of the current confused state of Supreme Court and lower court jurisprudence in the wake of Roe v


    5. jurisprudence), but claim to interpret the words of the prophet Muhammad


    6. Stephen Coughlin, a lawyer and Army Reserves intelligence specialist recruited by the Joint Chiefs to be their expert on the doctrine and jurisprudence of jihad, took Pace’s admonition to heart


    7. This certain and actual truth is based on noting other than the Qur'an who includes the Sun'na, the tradition, the jurisprudence and all what benefits man and blesses him here and in the hereafter


    8. And there can be no jurisprudence for that which has a clear judgment relating to it within the Qur’an


    9. He used to stay up all night, not praying but looking for solutions for the issues and matters that concern Muslims according to his era, because the Islamic jurisprudence renews with time


    10. There are lots of issues in our age that not found in the books of jurisprudence that studied in our schools because they are new, who can put the rules for them according to the religion of Allah? The wise jurists and scholars, who can renew the religion, because they studied it and followed it, so Allah granted them a clear insight so that they see things with light from Allah

    11. But Jacob might have been thinking of Rome; of architecture; of jurisprudence; as he sat under the plane tree in Hyde Park


    12. "'Seek whom the crime will profit,' says an axiom of jurisprudence


    13. "Questions of medical jurisprudence ought not to be left to the chance of decent knowledge in a medical witness, and the coroner ought not to be a man who will believe that strychnine will destroy the coats of the stomach if an ignorant practitioner happens to tell him so


    14. "Does medical jurisprudence provide nothing against these infringements?" said Mr


    15. Prince Andrew said that for that work an education in jurisprudence was needed which he


    16. In the domain of jurisprudence, which consists of discussions of how a state and power might be arranged were it possible for all that to be arranged, it is all very clear; but when applied to history that definition of power needs explanation


    17. The science of jurisprudence regards the state and power as the ancients regarded fire- namely, as something existing absolutely


    18. From this fundamental difference between the view held by history and that held by jurisprudence, it follows that jurisprudence can tell minutely how in its opinion power should be constituted and what power- existing immutably outside time- is, but to history’s questions about the meaning of the mutations of power in time it can answer nothing


    19. The theory of the transference of the collective will of the people to historic persons may perhaps explain much in the domain of jurisprudence and be essential for its purposes, but in


    20. Religion, the common sense of mankind, the science of jurisprudence, and history itself

    21. But ploughed up to the primary rock of the matter, the two great principles laid down in the twin whaling laws previously quoted, and applied and elucidated by Lord Ellenborough in the above cited case; these two laws touching Fast-Fish and Loose-Fish, I say, will, on reflection, be found the fundamentals of all human jurisprudence; for notwithstanding its complicated tracery of sculpture, the Temple of the Law, like the Temple of the Philistines, has but two props to stand on


    22. Mitya forgot his surname though he knew him, had seen him: he was the “investigating lawyer,” from the “school of jurisprudence,” who had only lately come to the town


    23. , in comparison with such knowledge as we have thrown aside and handed over to the perversions of the professors of theology, jurisprudence, political economy, financial science, etc


    24. Prince Andrew said that for that work an education in jurisprudence was needed which he did not possess


    25. And that is how power is understood by the science of jurisprudence, that exchange bank of history which offers to exchange history’s understanding of power for true gold


    26. The science of jurisprudence regards the state and power as the ancients regarded fire—namely, as something existing absolutely


    27. From this fundamental difference between the view held by history and that held by jurisprudence, it follows that jurisprudence can tell minutely how in its opinion power should be constituted and what power—existing immutably outside time—is, but to history’s questions about the meaning of the mutations of power in time it can answer nothing


    28. The theory of the transference of the collective will of the people to historic persons may perhaps explain much in the domain of jurisprudence and be essential for its purposes, but in its application to history, as soon as revolutions, conquests, or civil wars occur—that is, as soon as history begins—that theory explains nothing


    29. Religion, the common sense of mankind, the science of jurisprudence, and history itself understand alike this relation between necessity and freedom


    30. After my thoughts had for two years been turned in the same direction, fate seemed expressly to have brought me face to face for the first time in my life with a fact which showed me absolutely unmistakably in practice what had long been clear to me in theory, that the organization of our society rests, not as people interested in maintaining the present order of things like to imagine, on certain principles of jurisprudence, but on simple brute force, on the murder and torture of men

    31. And that nothing but a necessity, invincible by other means, can justify such a prostration of laws which constitute the pillars of our whole system of jurisprudence, and are the foundation laws of the State governments


    32. " Washington, sir, was not a lawyer, and who can wonder that his fair mind was alarmed by such a solemn declaration? That it was kept in suspense by the assertion, that the act for establishing the bank would overturn the pillars of our whole system of jurisprudence, and the foundation laws of the State governments? But, sir, it required only the knowledge of a lawyer at once to overturn these objections


    33. For there is scarcely one of them which has not, since the establishment of its particular constitution, made material alterations in some of those branches of its jurisprudence, especially the law of descents


    34. To that legal or artificial person, once created, the common law of every State, of itself, annexes all those incidents and attributes which are represented as a prostration of the main pillars of their jurisprudence


    35. On the resemblance of our laws! No! the sources of our jurisprudence spring from another and a different country


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    Synonyms for "jurisprudence"

    jurisprudence law legal philosophy

    "jurisprudence" definitions

    the branch of philosophy concerned with the law and the principles that lead courts to make the decisions they do


    the collection of rules imposed by authority