The Constitutionalist: Notes on the First AmendmentLexington Books, 2005 - 826 ページ In this new edition of the acclaimed 1971 original, George Anastaplo provides us with a detailed legal, historical, and dialectical analysis of the First Amendment with special attention to the reasoning of the Founding Fathers. Heralded as a groundbreaking work on freedom of expression and constitutional rights, The Constitutionalist challenges the reader to truly understand through a legal and philosophical viewpoint the roles of freedom of speech and freedom of the press in our society, or any society. Supplementing the original text are thorough appendices, including an in-depth record of Anastaplo's own remarkable bar admission case, and extensive notes exploring a range of topics from important political events to the nature of American institutions, as well as a wealth of discriminating references and commentary pulling from anthropology, sociology, psychology, and literature. This book is essential and engrossing reading for law students, legal scholars, and anyone interested in the development and application of free speech and the First Amendment. |
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xxi ページ
... sense there was in what I had been say- ing about the risks we ran ( at home as well as abroad ) because of the miscalculations fostered by our repressiveness . Some useful recognition did come in due course , dramatized by the cover ...
... sense there was in what I had been say- ing about the risks we ran ( at home as well as abroad ) because of the miscalculations fostered by our repressiveness . Some useful recognition did come in due course , dramatized by the cover ...
xxix ページ
... sense , the Con- gressional Record . " On one page of notes , chosen completely at random , he refers to or quotes Aristotle ( three times ) , [ Alexander ] Meiklejohn , St. Augustine , Plato ( three times ) , Euclid , Maimonides , the ...
... sense , the Con- gressional Record . " On one page of notes , chosen completely at random , he refers to or quotes Aristotle ( three times ) , [ Alexander ] Meiklejohn , St. Augustine , Plato ( three times ) , Euclid , Maimonides , the ...
xliii ページ
... sense of freedom of speech and of the press in Anglo - Amer- ican constitutional law . We are thus moved to return , in closing , to the Law , its impli- cations and aspirations . A classmate recalled , a few years ago , his " best ...
... sense of freedom of speech and of the press in Anglo - Amer- ican constitutional law . We are thus moved to return , in closing , to the Law , its impli- cations and aspirations . A classmate recalled , a few years ago , his " best ...
l ページ
... sense of decency " , read " its sense of de- cency " ; page 672 , line 7 : for " chap . 5 , sec . 8 " , read " chap . 5 , sec . 13 " ; page 677 , line 10B : insert bracket sign before " Letter " ; page 682 , line 34 : expand the Burke ...
... sense of decency " , read " its sense of de- cency " ; page 672 , line 7 : for " chap . 5 , sec . 8 " , read " chap . 5 , sec . 13 " ; page 677 , line 10B : insert bracket sign before " Letter " ; page 682 , line 34 : expand the Burke ...
lxi ページ
... sense that the presence of the author is very apparent throughout the text and appendices . The appendices are interesting in their own right — one covers the Chicago conspiracy trial and the au- thor's criticisms of all parties to the ...
... sense that the presence of the author is very apparent throughout the text and appendices . The appendices are interesting in their own right — one covers the Chicago conspiracy trial and the au- thor's criticisms of all parties to the ...
目次
I A JOURNAL OF PROCEEDINGS | 3 |
II THE SUPREME LAW OF THE LAND | 11 |
III CONGRESS SHALL MAKE NO LAW | 35 |
IV ALL LEGISLATIVE POWERS HEREIN GRANTED | 53 |
V ABRIDGING THE FREEDOM OF SPEECH | 93 |
VI THE POWERS NOT DELEGATED TO THE UNITED STATES | 133 |
VII A MORE PERFECT UNION | 171 |
VIII THE BLESSINGS OF LIBERTY | 205 |
APPENDIX A STAGES IN THE FIRST CONGRESS OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT | 289 |
CIRCULAR AND INDICTMENT | 294 |
APPENDIX C DUE PROCESS AND THE WORLD OF COMMERCE | 306 |
A TRIAL IN CHICAGO | 312 |
PRINCIPIIS OBSTA | 324 |
APPENDIX F IN RE GEORGE ANASTAPLO 195061 | 331 |
NOTES | 419 |
809 | |
IX WE DO ORDAIN AND ESTABLISH | 273 |
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Adams admission American Annals argued argument Aristotle Article authority Bill of Rights character and fitness Chicago L Chicago Sun-Times Chicago Tribune citizens civil committee common law Communist Party Congress congressional consider Constitution Constitutionalist crime Crosskey danger debate decision Declaration defendants discussion dissenting due process duty effect entry evident exercise federal Federalist Fourteenth Amendment freedom of speech George Anastaplo habeas corpus House ibid Illinois italics added John judge judicial jury lawyers legislation legislature Leo Strauss libel liberty Lincoln Madison matters means ment Nicomachean Ethics observed opinion perhaps petition petitioner petitioner's Plato political President principles problem prohibition prosecution protection question reason record refusal Republic republican respect restraints right of revolution rule Sedition Act seems Senate Smith Act statute suggested Supreme Court text at chap thought tion trial United University of Chicago York