37,444 research outputs found

    Six Encounters

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    Six poems by Simon Smith with six watercolour paintings by Felicity Allen. Online publication only

    Six poems from Martial translated by Simon Smith

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    Six poems from the Lati

    One poem by Rilke translated by Simon Smith

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    One poem from the Germa

    Six poems by Pierre Reverdy translated by Simon Smith

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    Six poem

    Six poems by Catullus translated by Simon Smith

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    Six poems from the Lati

    Thirteen poems by Catullus translated by Simon Smith

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    Thirteen poems from the Lati

    Charlie May Simon materials

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    This collection contains materials relating to Arkansas author Charlie May Simon

    Brochure: Simon Enterprises, "The Smith Houses at Reston," Undated

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    Textual: brochure, original; 11” x 8.5” (27.9 cm x 21.6 cm)Brochure from Simon Enterprises entitled "The Smith Houses at Reston" that is undated. This is a brochure for the homes on Lake Anne in Reston, Virginia that were designed by architect Chloethiel Woodard Smith. Planned Community Archives Collection, rm01.3

    Introduction to the Special Issue on Decision Analysis and Social Media

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    Published as: Ali E. Abbas, Jay Simon, Chris Smith (2017) Introduction to the Special Issue on Decision Analysis and Social Media. Decision Analysis 14(4):227-228. https://doi.org/10.1287/deca.2017.036

    Adam Smith and The Law

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    The law is one of the main subjects in Adam Smith’s studies. He deals with it in the Lectures of Jurisprudence (LJ) and in the Wealth of the Nations (WN) and his ethical and philosophical premises are exposed in the Theory of Moral Sentiments (TMS). This interest in law is consistent with enlightenment culture which aspired to elaborate a great Science of Legislation in order to have enough knowledge to reform society and replace the Ancien Régime institutions with new ones able to support the course of progress and improve the life of the people. Yet, Smithian thought, while sharing the cultural aim of his age, is divergent from Juridical Enlightenment in many ways. I explain this divergence by going back to the deep epistemological and analytical differences between the Scottish and European Enlightenment, showing how Smith’s approach to the doctrine of natural law is antithetic to the utilitarian and contractualistic approaches typical of other enlightenment schools. Indeed, if Smith develops a theory of law founded on economic thesis, it is very discordant with an efficiency-inspired economic analysis of law, which has its early expression in the works of exponents of Juridical Enlightenment, such as Cesare Beccaria, Gaetano Filangieri, and Jeremy Bentham. In the next section, I describe Smith’s concepts of law and rights in the works of Jurisprudence. The second section is devoted to the role of justice, since its enforcement is considered the legislator’s main duty. In the following section I compare the Smithian theory of law to the ideas of Juridical Enlightenment. The final section argues why Smith’s reflection on law is not to be considered as a precedent of economic analysis of law. A short conclusion closes this chapter
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