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Page "Philosophy of law" ¶ 71
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Ronald and Dworkin
Ronald Dworkin ( 2005 ) rejects Hart's theory and proposes that all individuals should expect the equal respect and concern of those who govern them as a fundamental political right.
* Dworkin, Ronald.
* 1931 – Ronald Dworkin, American philosopher
Also of note is the work of the contemporary Philosopher of Law Ronald Dworkin who has advocated a constructivist theory of jurisprudence that can be characterized as a middle path between natural law theories and positivist theories of general jurisprudence.
Other important critiques have included that of Ronald Dworkin, John Finnis, and Joseph Raz.
Ronald Dworkin sought a theory of law which would justify judges ' ability to strike down democratically decided laws.
A contemporary deontological approach can be found in the work of the legal philosopher Ronald Dworkin.
Legal interpretivism, famously defended in the English speaking world by Ronald Dworkin, claims to have a position different from both natural law and positivism.
Hart's theory, although widely admired, has also been criticized by a variety of late twentieth century philosophers of law, including Ronald Dworkin, John Finnis, and Joseph Raz.
* Legal interpretivism is the view, espoused mainly by Ronald Dworkin, that law is not entirely based on social facts, but includes the morally best justification for the institutional facts and practices that we intuitively regard as legal.
A second important debate in recent years concerns interpretivism, a view that is associated mainly with Ronald Dworkin.
A contemporary deontological approach can be found in the work of the legal philosopher Ronald Dworkin.
* Ronald Dworkin
* Ronald Dworkin, Taking Rights Seriously ( Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1977 ).
* Ronald Dworkin, Law's Empire ( Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1986 ).
* Ronald Dworkin, Freedom's Law: The Moral Reading of the American Constitution ( Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997 ).
Ronald Dworkin held that there are three types of civil disobedience:
* Justice for Hedgehogs by Ronald Dworkin as the drowning swimmer one may or may not have an ethical duty to save.
# Ronald Dworkin, Principle, Policy, Procedure in A Matter of Principle ( 1985 ).
* Ronald Dworkin
Famous legal academics who graduated from Harvard Law include Erwin Chemerinsky, Ronald Dworkin, Susan Estrich, Arthur R. Miller, William L. Prosser, John Sexton, Kathleen Sullivan, Cass Sunstein, Michael Kinsley, Gerald L. Neuman, and Laurence Tribe.
* Ronald Dworkin, an American philosopher of law
Ronald Dworkin maintains that constitutional protection of freedom of conscience is central to democracy but creates personal duties to live up to it: " Freedom of conscience presupposes a personal responsibility of reflection, and it loses much of its meaning when that responsibility is ignored.
* Ronald Dworkin, Taking Rights Seriously ( Harvard University Press, 2005, originally 1977 ).

Ronald and Matter
* 1990: Ashley Bickerton and Ronald Jones included in " Mind Over Matter: Concept and Object " exhibition of ” third generation Conceptual artists ” at the Whitney Museum of American Art.
* A late reply ( 1994 Edition ) to Ronald Dworkin, who criticized legal positivism in general and especially Hart's account of law in Taking Rights Seriously ( 1977 ), A Matter of Principle ( 1985 ) and Law's Empire ( 1986 ).
* A late reply ( published as a postscript to the second edition ) to Ronald Dworkin, who criticized legal positivism in Taking Rights Seriously ( 1977 ), A Matter of Principle ( 1985 ) and Law's Empire ( 1986 ).
* A late reply ( 1994 Edition ) to Ronald Dworkin, who criticized legal positivism in general and especially Hart's account of law in Taking Rights Seriously ( 1977 ), A Matter of Principle ( 1985 ) and Law's Empire ( 1986 ).

Ronald and Cambridge
* Ronald L. Meek, Social Science and the Ignoble Savage, Cambridge U. P.
After the war he followed studies at Cambridge with the statistician and evolutionary biologist Ronald A. Fisher in the area of bacterial genetics.
In 1955, Sert founded a studio in Cambridge, Massachusetts, which in 1958 became a partnership with Huson Jackson and Ronald Gourley.
Ronald Hutton, a scholar of neopaganism, argues that the concept of the triple moon goddess as Maiden, Mother, and Crone, each facet corresponding to a phase of the moon, is a modern creation of Robert Graves, drawing on the work of 19th and 20th century scholars such as especially Jane Harrison ; and also Margaret Murray, James Frazer, the other members of the " myth and ritual " school or Cambridge Ritualists, and the occultist and writer Aleister Crowley.
* Hutton, Ronald, The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles, 1991, Blackwell ( Oxford and Cambridge ) ISBN 0-631-18946-7
These include the Carl Newell Jackson Lectures at Harvard University ( delivered 1976 ); the Stenton Lecture at Reading University ( delivered 1976 ); the Haskell Lectures at the University of Chicago ( delivered 1978 ); the ACLS Lectures in the History of Religion ( delivered 1981-2 ); the Curti Lectures in the University of Wisconsin, Madison ( delivered 1988 ); the Raleigh Lecture in History in the British Academy ( delivered 1992 ); the Tanner Lectures at Cambridge and Yale ( delivered 1993 and 1996 respectively ); the Sigmund H Danziger Jr Memorial Lecture at the University of Chicago ( delivered 1997 ); the Menahem Stern Lectures in Jerusalem ( delivered 2000 ); a Presidential Lecture at Stanford University ( delivered 2002 ); the Charles Homer Haskins Lecture (" A Life of Learning ") for the American Council of Learned Societies ( delivered 2003 ); and the Ronald Syme Lecture at Oxford University ( delivered 2006 ).
Ronald Deibert ( Toronto ), John Palfrey ( Harvard ), Rafal Rohozinski ( Cambridge ), and Jonathan Zittrain ( Harvard ) were ( and remain ) the co-founders and principal investigators of the ONI.
* Collins, Ronald K. L., ed., The Fundamental Holmes: A Free Speech Chronicle and Reader ( Cambridge University Press, 2010 )
The historians Ronald Smelser and Edward J. Davies II in The Myth of the Eastern Front ( Cambridge University Press, 2008 ) argue that, after 1945, Halder played a key role in creating a false and mythic view of the Nazi-Soviet war in which the Wehrmacht was largely blameless for both Germany's military defeat and its war crimes.
He worked successively at University College London with Karl Pearson, at Rothamsted Experimental Station with Ronald Fisher, and then as a reader in statistics in the University of Cambridge where he became the first Director of the Statistical Laboratory in 1953.
Reading Mathematics at Cambridge University Walter Bodmer worked with Sir Ronald Fisher, moving into statistics.
* Jacobs, Ronald F., Race, Media, and the Crisis of Civil Society: From the Watts Riots to Rodney King, Cambridge University Press, 2000.
Dalgliesh is asked to look into the death of Sir Ronald Callender in Cambridge and acquits Gray of any charges.
At Cambridge he met Ronald McKerrow, whose friendship helped shape Greg's decision to pursue a career in literature.

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