He aimed not so much to impart information, as to develop the analytical powers of the men, to make them think as lawyers. He questioned much; he answered little. Those who came to hear the law laid down went away to ponder what it ought to be. He loved... Proceedings of the ... Annual Meeting - Página 47por Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education (U.S.). Annual Meeting - 1919Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Colonial Society of Massachusetts - 1912 - 658 páginas
...Ames. His influence has been national. He analyzed the cases with his students by the Socratic method. He questioned much; he answered little. Those who...be. He loved the battle of wits; but he never argued simply for the sake of victory. He helped men in many ways, but most of all because he made them help... | |
| Colonial Society of Massachusetts - 1912 - 836 páginas
...analyzed the cases with his students by the Socratic method. He questioned much; he answered h'ttle. Those who came to hear the law laid down went away...He loved the battle of wits ; but he never argued simply for the sake of victory. He helped men in many ways, but most of all because he made them help... | |
| Harvard Law School. Association (1886- ) - 1918 - 552 páginas
...disclosed the true path to the light. And if, at times, one or the other man wandered away from his leading and opened up new roads to the goal, his acknowledgment...be. He loved the battle of wits; but he never argued simply for the sake of victory. He helped men in many ways, but most of all because he made them help... | |
| Harvard Law School. Association (1886- ) - 1918 - 550 páginas
...disclosed the true path to the light. And if, at times, one or the other man wandered away from his leading and opened up new roads to the goal, his acknowledgment...ought to be. He loved the battle of wits; but he never N argued simply for the sake of victory. He helped men in many ways, but most of all because he made... | |
| G. Edward White - 2003 - 424 páginas
...98 that suggest that Ames was "unexcelled in the development of coherent legal rules," 99 but that he "aimed not so much to impart information, as to develop the analytical powers of the [students], to make them think as lawyers"; 100 that Langdell in his later years "simply talked, slowly... | |
| Edward H. Warren - 2005 - 176 páginas
...Ames. His influence has been national. He analyzed the cases with his students by the Socratic method. He questioned much; he answered little. Those who...be. He loved the battle of wits, but he never argued simply for the sake of victory. He helped men in many ways, but most of all because he made them help... | |
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