Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, 1st Baronet, KCSI (3 March 1829 – 11 March 1894) was an English lawyer, judge, writer, and philosopher. One of the most famous critics of John Stuart Mill, Stephen achieved prominence as a philosopher, law reformer, and writer. Early life and education, 1829–1854.

  2. 9 de abr. de 2024 · Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, 1st Baronet (born March 3, 1829, London—died March 11, 1894, Ipswich, Suffolk, Eng.) was a British legal historian, Anglo-Indian administrator, judge, and author noted for his criminal-law reform proposals. His Indictable Offences Bill (late 1870s), though never enacted in Great Britain, has continued ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Sir James Fitzjames Stephen (March 3, 1829 - March 11, 1894) was an English lawyer and judge, noted for his criminal law reform proposals. His General View of the Criminal Law of England (1863) was the first attempt since William Blackstone to explain the principles of English law and justice in a literary form.

  4. 9 de may. de 2019 · James Fitzjames Stephen and the Landscape of Victorian Political Thought | Modern Intellectual History | Cambridge Core. Home. > Journals. > Modern Intellectual History. > Volume 18 Issue 1. > James Fitzjames Stephen and the Landscape of Victorian... English. Français. James Fitzjames Stephen and the Landscape of Victorian Political Thought.

    • Greg Conti
    • 2021
  5. Category. Political Science. James Fitzjames Stephen was an English Victorian lawyer, journalist and political philosopher who challenged John Stuart Mill’s conception of liberty in favor of a more.

  6. James Fitzjames Stephen (author) Stuart D. Warner (editor) The Liberty Fund edition of this work. Impugning John Stuart Mill’s famous treatise, On Liberty, Stephen criticized Mill for turning abstract doctrines of the French Revolution into “the creed of a religion.”.

  7. This is an chapter on the thought of the Victorian-era judge, Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, about punishment of criminals. It discusses some of the themes in his major work, “The History of the Criminal Law of England.”