SYMPOSIUM:
“LAW &”: PHILOSOPHICAL, PSYCHOLOGICAL, LINGUISTIC, AND BIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP
SYMPOSIUM EDITOR
Claire Hill
FOREWORD
Micah Thorner
I. LAW AND LANGUAGE
PERNICIOUS AMBIGUITY IN CONTRACTS AND STATUTES
Lawrence M. Solan
HOW DO GERMAN CONTRACTS DO AS MUCH WITH FEWER WORDS?
Claire A. Hill and Christopher King
DID CLINTON LIE?: DEFINING “SEXUAL RELATIONS”
Peter Tiersma
AUTHORITY HEURISTICS
David J. Gerber
II. LAW AND PSYCHOLOGY, ECONOMICS, AND BIOLOGY
FEAR ASSESSMENT: COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS AND THE PRICING OF FEAR AND ANXIETY
Matthew D. Adler
APOLOGY AND THICK TRUST: WHAT SPOUSE ABUSERS AND NEGLIGENT DOCTORS MIGHT HAVE IN COMMON
Erin Ann O’Hara
III. LAW AND PHILOSOPHY
RIGHTS, RATIONALITY, AND THE PREEMPTION OF REASONS
Richard Warner
VALUING INSIDE KNOWLEDGE: POLICE INFILTRATION AS A PROBLEM FOR THE LAW OF EVIDENCE
Jacqueline E. Ross
COMMON KNOWLEDGE, COMMUNICATION, AND PUBLIC REASON
Bruce Chapman
IV. LAW AND PSYCHOLOGY
WHAT’S WRONG WITH HARMLESS THEORIES OF PUNISHMENT
Kenworthey Bilz and John M. Darley
EPILOGUE: LAW AND FABLE
THE COILED SERPENT OF ARGUMENT: REASON, AUTHORITY, AND LAW IN A TALMUDIC TALE
David Luban
STUDENT NOTES AND COMMENTS
MEDICATING TO EXECUTE: SINGLETON V. NORRIS
Michelle L. Brunsvold
THE ANTI-COMPETITIVE EFFECTS AND ANTITRUST IMPLICATIONS OF CATEGORY MANAGEMENT AND CATEGORY CAPTAINS OF CONSUMER PRODUCTS
Leo S. Carameli, Jr.