Ratio Juris

Law, politics, philosophy

A Member of the Jurisdynamics Network

Thursday, August 01, 2013

The Constituent Power of "The People" and the Distributed Intelligence of Democratic Reason: An Epistemic Defense of Democracy

Unfortunately, I do not have the time today to cross-post this, so please see Religious Left Law for my thoughts on Making Sense of the Constituent Power of “The People” and the Distributed Intelligence of Democratic Reason: An Epistemic Defense of Democracy.

posted by Patrick S. O'Donnell at 11:17 AM

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

  • Contributors
  • Jim Chen home mail ssrn   RSS
  • Patrick S. O'Donnell mail ssrn  Academia.edu
  • Erin Daly home mail ssrn 
  • Stefanie Lindquist home mail ssrn 
  • Chad M. Oldfather home mail ssrn 
  • Lori A. Ringhand home mail ssrn 
  • Elizabeth Weeks Leonard home mail ssrn 

  • Guest
  • Thomas A. Smith home mail ssrn 

Ratio Juris Essentials

  • Reading Lists
    Slavery and reparations

Previous Posts

  • Ascertaining the motives of a rebellious slave
  • Who Built Detroit? Who...and in a derivative sense...
  • Toward an Understanding & Normative Model of the A...
  • Happy Birthday (95th) Birthday Nelson Mandela!
  • Can you identify this remarkable individual?
  • Planting the Seeds of a Real "Green Revolution"
  • Several Buddhist Contributions to Humanistic Progress
  • Dignity's Debut: A Happy Marriage of Liberty and E...
  • Open U.S. Intervention in Syrian War
  • Psychoanalysis & Buddhism: A Basic Reading Guide

The Other Ratio Juris

    Ratio Juris is a great journal on jurisprudence and philosophy of law. But we have no connection to them, and they have no connection to us. Please read this clarification.


Subscribe to Ratio Juris

Enter your email address:

Subscribe to Ratio Juris by e-mail  

 

Technorati search

Add Ratio Juris to your Technorati favorites

Supreme Court/FindLaw search

Search FindLaw's database of Supreme Court decisions since 1893 (U.S. Reports, volumes 150-present). Browsable by U.S. Reports volume number and by year. Searchable by citation, case title, and full text.

Browsing
Supreme Court decisions: by volume, by year

Citation Search

U.S.
E.g., 410 U.S. 113

Title Search


E.g., Roe v. Wade

Full-Text Search


[options ]

Unlimited CLE

Claim Your Profile on Avvo

eLocal Lawyers

VigLink badge

Powered by Blogger   Listed on BlogShares



 

Google
WWW Ratio Juris