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Todd Zywicky, professor at George Mason's Scalia Law School, challenges some conventional legal doctrine, taking up the views of Bruno Leone and Friedrich Hayek. What if the legal world has underestimated the power of spontaneous order? Todd's intellectual journey sheds light on how these groundbreaking ideas contrast sharply with the dominant constructivist views shaping contemporary legal thought.
Todd offers perspectives on the role of intuition and reasonableness in the courtroom, inspired by the legacies of Leone and Hayek. Uncover the hidden parallels between market dynamics and legal systems, emphasizing the fluidity of Roman law as a process of discovery.
Links:
Todd Zywicki's Faculty Page
Zywicki's published work on Leoni, and the Common Law
The Loper Bright SCOTUS Decision (And the Gorsuch concurrence!)
You can follow Mike Munger on Twitter at @mungowitz
4.8
5454 ratings
Send us a text
Todd Zywicky, professor at George Mason's Scalia Law School, challenges some conventional legal doctrine, taking up the views of Bruno Leone and Friedrich Hayek. What if the legal world has underestimated the power of spontaneous order? Todd's intellectual journey sheds light on how these groundbreaking ideas contrast sharply with the dominant constructivist views shaping contemporary legal thought.
Todd offers perspectives on the role of intuition and reasonableness in the courtroom, inspired by the legacies of Leone and Hayek. Uncover the hidden parallels between market dynamics and legal systems, emphasizing the fluidity of Roman law as a process of discovery.
Links:
Todd Zywicki's Faculty Page
Zywicki's published work on Leoni, and the Common Law
The Loper Bright SCOTUS Decision (And the Gorsuch concurrence!)
You can follow Mike Munger on Twitter at @mungowitz
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