Reflections on Freedom of Speech and the First AmendmentUniversity Press of Kentucky, 16. 2. 2007 - Počet stran: 336 The guarantee of free speech enshrined in the U.S. Bill of Rights draws upon two millennia of Western thought about the value and necessity of free inquiry. Acclaimed legal scholar George Anastaplo traces the philosophical development of the idea of free inquiry from Plato's Apology to Socrates to John Milton's Areopagitica. He describes how these seminal texts and others by such diverse thinkers as St. Paul, Thomas More, and John Stuart Mill influenced the formation and the earliest applications of the First Amendment. Anastaplo also focuses on the critical free speech implications of a dozen Supreme Court cases and shows how First Amendment interpretations have evolved in response to modern events. Reflections on Freedom of Speech and the First Amendment grounds its vision of America's most basic freedoms in the intellectual traditions of Western political philosophy, providing crucial insight into the legal challenges of the future through the lens of the past. |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-5 z 50
... argument before the United States Supreme Court in the Pentagon Papers Case. A Justice asked counsel for the newspaper: Let us assume that when the members of the Court go back and open up this sealed record we find something there that ...
... arguments needed for its viability, including the argument that appearances can be deceiving. Particularly to be recognized, then, is the fact, as Thomas More put it, that just “as much folly is uttered with painted polished speache, so ...
... argument [in the Areopagitica], couched in poetic imagery and high rhetoric, has become a cornerstone in the liberal defense of freedom of speech, press, and thought.” This document is particularly important with respect to freedom of ...
... arguments against prior restraints usually acknowledged that prosecutions could properly be directed against the publication of offensive matter. Such offensiveness could consist of treasonable utterance, sedition, fraud, blasphemy ...
... arguments are directed primarily against the institution of censorship, it is evident that those arguments also have ... argument here, he can remind us of the ancient quarrel between poetry and philosophy that Socrates spoke of. To the ...
Obsah
Private Property and Public Freedom | |
Buckley v Valeo 1976 | |
The Regulation of Commercial Speech | |
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948 | |
The Future of the First Amendment? | |
A The Declaration of Independence 1776 | |
B The United States Constitution 1787 | |
The Amendments to the United States Constitution 17911992 | |
The Sedition Act of 1798 | |
Freedom of Speech and the Coming of the Civil | |
A Defense of Justice Black 1937 | |
Schenck v United States 1919 Abrams v United States 1919 | |
Debs v United States 1919 Gitlow v New York 1925 | |
Winston S Churchill and the Cause of Freedom | |
Dennis v United States 1951 the Rosenberg Case 19501953 | |
Cohen v California 1971 Texas v Johnson 1989 | |
The Pentagon Papers Case 1971 | |
Obscenity and the | |
Thomas More Petition to Henry VIII on Parliamentary Freedom of Speech 1521 | |
E The Virginia Statute of Religious Liberty 1786 | |
F Some Stages of the ReligionSpeechPressAssemblyPetition Provisions in the First Congress 1789 | |
G The Sedition Act 1798 | |
H The Virginia Resolutions 1798 | |
J Thomas Jefferson the First Inaugural Address 1801 | |
K Schenck v United States Leaflet 1917 | |
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948 | |
George Anastaplo On the Alcatraz Imprisonment of a Convicted | |
N George Anastaplo An ObscenityRelated Case from Dallas 1989 | |
O Cases and Other Materials Drawn | |
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Reflections on Freedom of Speech and the First Amendment George Anastaplo Náhled není k dispozici. - 2007 |