What protection would we have to prevent an individual whose real world law degree was confidentially verified from making pronouncements on intellectual property law, when they were only a tax attorney or real estate lawyer, in real life, when they had no more genuine expert understanding of intellectual property law than you or I ? talk ) 13 : 43, 6 January 2015 ( UTC)
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Daniell R . Odo, Article 5, Removing Confidentiality Protections and the Get Tough Rhetoric : What Has Gone Wrong With The Juvenile Justice System ? , " Boston College Third World Law Journal ", Volume 18, Issue 1, 1 / 1 / 98 ( cite as 18 B . C . Third World L . J . 105, 1998 ) p . 120
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The real-dialectical side of his teachings Bahnsen laid down in the paper " On the Philosophy of History " ( 1871 ), his central work " The Contradiction in the Knowledge and Being of the World " ( 1880 / 82 ), and his anniversary publication to the jubilee of the city T�bingen " The Tragical as World Law and Humour as Aesthetic Shape of the Metaphysical " ( 1877 ).
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Repeatedly and needlessly ( and sometimes baselessly ) citing BLP to justify blanking comments like " your arguments are unreasonable and obtuse " is unhelpful at best and at worst looks like a deliberate attempt to create a similar chilling effect without actually citing real-world laws and so violating NLT . Again, I am not saying any sanctions should be brought against him at this time, but he should be told firmly that criticisms of his on-wiki actions do not qualify as BLP-violations, and removing entire conversations between other users because one part of one comment by one of them was a personal attack against him is unacceptable . ?? ) 13 : 14, 5 December 2016 ( UTC)
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Fromkin distinguishes eight stages in universal history, most of them hinging on events historians of many stripes can agree on as the most significant in the history of humankind : the emergence of the hominid line, apes with brains, in prehistoric Africa ( " Becoming Human " ); the discovery of agriculture and the creation of the first cities-- settlements whose residents were not all farmers ( " Inventing Civilization " ); the sudden rise of universalizing religious and moral systems all over civilized Eurasia in the sixth century B . C . ( " Developing a Conscience " ); the birth of the idea of world civilization with the empires of ancient Eurasia ( " Seeking a Lasting Peace " ); the rise of rationalism and empirical science ( " Achieving Rationality " ); the irreversible encounter, after the 15th century, between human societies in Eurasia and Africa and those in the Americas ( " Uniting the Planet " ); the industrial modernization that began in the 18th century ( " Releasing Nature's Energies " ); and finally the steady movement toward democratic government centered in the 19th century and the unsteady movement toward decolonization and world law in the 20th ( " Ruling Ourselves " ).