Plato's philosophy is characterized by his belief in an objective reality that exists beyond the physical world, known as the world of Forms. He believed in the immortality of the soul and that knowledge is innate and can be recollected through dialectic reasoning. Plato also emphasized the importance of justice, ethics, and the pursuit of truth in achieving a harmonious society.
Some of his hobbies were listening to Socrates, studing, and philosophy.
Jurisprudence. The philosophy of law. Also, the science and study of law.
"The philosophy of law concerns itself with questions about the nature of law and the concepts that structure the practice of law." See link for full article.
Mark Tebbit has written: 'Philosophy of law' -- subject(s): Law, Philosophy
"Lava los platos" in English means "wash the dishes."
Gerald J. Postema has written: 'Philosophy and the Law of Torts (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy and Law)' 'Bentham' 'Bentham and the common law tradition' -- subject(s): Common law, Law, Philosophy, Utilitarianism 'Bentham and the Common Law Tradition (Clarendon Law Series)'
Stefano Bertea has written: 'New essays on the normativity of law' -- subject(s): Normativity (Ethics), Philosophy, Social norms, Law, Norm (Philosophy) 'New essays on the normativity of law' -- subject(s): Normativity (Ethics), Philosophy, Social norms, Law, Norm (Philosophy)
Law and philosophy.
Matthias Klatt has written: 'Institutionalized reason' -- subject(s): Civil rights, Philosophy, Law 'Making the law explicit' -- subject(s): Law, Methodology, Semantics (Philosophy), Language, Philosophy, Semantics (Law), Language and languages
JURISPRUDENCE
(from dictionary.com) 1. the science or philosophy of law. 2.a body or system of laws. 3.a department of law: medical jurisprudence.