Excerpt from The Data of Jurisprudence
This volume is the first installment of a treatise on Jurisprudence, but is so far complete in itself. I have given it the title of "The Data of Jurisprudence," because I am more anxious to state the problem, "What is Right?" "What is Law?" than at present to offer any solution. I have generally adopted the standpoint of the common sense man, but the difficulty in the earlier chapters is to stop at the point where law becomes technical. I have not, however, hesitated to use technical illustrations where the law is simple and elementary, because every law, like the language in which it is expressed, is an adaptation of popular ideas to technical purposes. I have made my illustrations as numerous and as wide as possible, in order that the bases of induction may be as wide as possible. In like manner, in the mode of arrangement and in the discussion of the aim of law in the last chapter, it has been necessary to anticipate much which belongs to more abstract philosophy, but I hope to have an opportunity of discussing the subject there dealt with more fully and more deliberately hereafter.
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