Form and content in early modern legal books
According to common sense, a book is only a way of conveying communicative contents (namely, ideas): on their own, books cannot change or add anything to what authors think about what they want to communicate to readers. The most recent history of books produced a Copernican shift in such a simplist...
Main Author: | António Manuel Hespanha |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | deu |
Published: |
Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory
2008-01-01
|
Series: | Rechtsgeschichte - Legal History |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://data.rg.mpg.de/rechtsgeschichte/rg12_2008-recherche-hespanha.pdf |
Similar Items
-
Legal History and Legal Education
by: António Manuel Hespanha
Published: (2004-01-01) -
Property and the Early Modern Condition
by: Manuel Bastias Saavedra
Published: (2019-01-01) -
Legal Orientalism, or Legal Imperialism?
by: Yang Li
Published: (2014-01-01) -
Towards a New Narrative of Natural Law Thinking in Early Modern Scholasticism
by: José Luis Egío García
Published: (2019-01-01) -
An unknown treasure for historians of early medieval Europe: the debate of German legal historians on the nature of medieval law
by: Dirk Heirbaut
Published: (2010-01-01)