Hi, law student here, so glad you're covering Jurisprudence! Pretty sure the person in the picture is St. Thomas Aquinas, the famous priest and philosopher.
Hi there. Actor studying for an MA Law Conversion. I think Context is everything, so I'm interested in any and all aspects of the law. Even if its not something I would use day-to-day, it will give some extra information somewhere that will enhance the other allegedly more practical knowledge.
I came from the Civil Law traditional and it is funky, because we call jurisprudence what you call Law, thecollection of cases, ans we call Law per se or Philosophy of Law what you call Jurisprudence, since it is way beyond the work of judges, imply all the usesof law in Govermnent and society
4:04 PGDL student here, to be honest, the only place I’ve come across the word ‘jurisprudence’ is in religious studies I took on years ago and, typing this answer before reaching your explanation of the word, I understand jurisprudence to be the … overarching reasoning or philosophy from which legal principles are derived. The word I’m thinking of is ‘usool’ in Arabic which has a similar meaning to ‘principles’. I’d say understanding jurisprudence is important to have a well-rounded understanding of the practice and objectives of law so I think it’s very foundational to the practice, though it may not be the most useful if you’re just looking to get a job and get into commercial or company law lol. I find it interesting, especially since I see parallels in the way ESL is derived with the way Shariah law is derived and developed which is not something I’d expected to find coming into the studies! No idea who the guy in the picture is but I’m guessing Aristotle because I’ve seen a painting of Plato in which he’s depicted completely bald so!
I agree that it isn't necessarily the most important for just getting a job. Trust me, I've seen plenty of undergrads who don't care about this kind of stuff and just want to learn to get their training contracts! Although, i do think it's incredibly important foundational knowledge for everyone regardless of which area you decide to go down
Jurisprudence is important in developing law as you get an insight into the theories behind the law.
Thank you for this 🥺 I’m taking this as a course right now and I need all the help I can get
Hi, law student here, so glad you're covering Jurisprudence! Pretty sure the person in the picture is St. Thomas Aquinas, the famous priest and philosopher.
Indeed it is!
We'll get onto him and his theories of natural law very soon!
Awesome, can't wait to learn more from you!
Law student here! Very excited to start Juris❤ but definitely need some assistance along the way - thank you making this freely available ❤
It is very good continue
Hi there. Actor studying for an MA Law Conversion. I think Context is everything, so I'm interested in any and all aspects of the law. Even if its not something I would use day-to-day, it will give some extra information somewhere that will enhance the other allegedly more practical knowledge.
It's vital, especially for law students. I just registered it for this semester.
Thank you, ❤❤❤
It is important, philosophy of law
Malawi 🇲🇼
Very nicely explained ❤
I came from the Civil Law traditional and it is funky, because we call jurisprudence what you call Law, thecollection of cases, ans we call Law per se or Philosophy of Law what you call Jurisprudence, since it is way beyond the work of judges, imply all the usesof law in Govermnent and society
Anothet quality video champ. Thanks for everything
My pleasure!
When you can't wait for year 3 :P
I need sneak peek lol
Jurisprudence is a part of my ongoing studies. No school. No accolades. Just info.
Same. 💪🏻
I finally know why redacted and hellbreaker were fighting. Thank you
4:04 PGDL student here, to be honest, the only place I’ve come across the word ‘jurisprudence’ is in religious studies I took on years ago and, typing this answer before reaching your explanation of the word, I understand jurisprudence to be the … overarching reasoning or philosophy from which legal principles are derived. The word I’m thinking of is ‘usool’ in Arabic which has a similar meaning to ‘principles’. I’d say understanding jurisprudence is important to have a well-rounded understanding of the practice and objectives of law so I think it’s very foundational to the practice, though it may not be the most useful if you’re just looking to get a job and get into commercial or company law lol. I find it interesting, especially since I see parallels in the way ESL is derived with the way Shariah law is derived and developed which is not something I’d expected to find coming into the studies!
No idea who the guy in the picture is but I’m guessing Aristotle because I’ve seen a painting of Plato in which he’s depicted completely bald so!
I agree that it isn't necessarily the most important for just getting a job.
Trust me, I've seen plenty of undergrads who don't care about this kind of stuff and just want to learn to get their training contracts!
Although, i do think it's incredibly important foundational knowledge for everyone regardless of which area you decide to go down
Interesting guys lol