This talk addressed the attitudes toward interpretation that should be
taken with constitutional, statutory and contractual materials and argue
that the underlying linguistic problems should drive the analysis, and
that efforts to tailor rules of interpretation to institutional settings
may be useful dramatic flourishes, but in the end only detract for
understanding how and why language works.
Liberty Links
- Alexis de Tocqueville Institution
- Atlas Network
- Atlas Society
- Austrian Economics
- Austrian Economics Newsletter
- Bankrupting America
- Bastiat Institute
- Bastiat Society
- Cato Institute
- Center for Constitutional Rights
- Center for Freedom & Prosperity
- Center for Individual Freedom
- Economic Freedom
- Economic Liberty
- Economic Noise
- Econtalk
- Emergent Orders
- Financial Sense
- Foundation for Economic Education
- FreedomWorks
- Goldwater Institute
- Hoover Institution
- Imprimis
- Institute for Justice
- James G. Rickards
- Jason Lewis
- Kahn Academy
- King World News
- Knowledge Problem
- Learn Liberty
- Libertarianism
- Liberty For All
- Library of Economics and Liberty
- Ludwig von Mises Institute
- Manhattan Institute for Policy Reasearch
- Mark Steyn
- Mark Steyn
- Mercatus Center
- Reason
- Richard A. Epstein
- Russell Roberts
- Spontaneous Order Audio
- Spontaneous Order Video
- Swift Economics
- The Federalist Society
- The Freeman
- The Future of Freedom Foundation
- The Independent institute
- The Locke Institute
- The Mont Pelerin Society
- The Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics
- The Review of Austrian Economics
- Thomas Sowell
- Uncommon Knowledge
- University of Common Sense
- Victor Davis Hanson
- Walter E. Williams
Thursday, February 23, 2012
NYU Law Journal of Law and Liberty, Professor Richard Epstein
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