Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Sacrificial Lamb's avatar

I finally had the chance to look around a little bit, and I've found a few examples of books that delve into Roman Law:

* "Textbook on Roman Law (3rd Edition, 2005)" by Borkowski, A. & du Plessis, P.

* "An Introduction to Roman Law (1975)" by Nicholas, B.

* "Roman Law and the Legal World of the Romans (1st Edition, 2010)" by Andrew M. Riggsby

I've also found a couple sites on Roman Law, but I guess there's much more out there.

https://www.lawteacher.net/free-law-essays/contract-law/contract-in-roman-law.php

https://imperiumromanum.pl/en/article/literal-contracts-in-the-roman-law/

Oh, and when I used Bing as a search engine, and typed "basic principles of logic", It gave me this:

The basic principles of logic are:

* The law of contradiction: a statement cannot be both true and false at the same time.

* The law of excluded middle: a statement is either true or false, there is no third option.

* The principle of identity: a statement is identical to itself, and different from any other statement.

* The principle of sufficient reason: every statement must have a reason or evidence to support it.

* The structure of a logical argument: an argument consists of propositions, premises, inference, and conclusion.

Expand full comment
Stay Slick's avatar

Yes, except... There's a dark side to the Roman legal system, civilization, and everything that came with it. Justice on Earth shouldn't require legions to conquer hearts and minds...

https://open.substack.com/pub/heyslick/p/the-romans-ruined-everything

Expand full comment
23 more comments...

No posts