Until either philosophers become kings," said Socrates, "or kings philosophers, States will never succeed in remedying their shortcomings." And if he was loath to give forth this view, because, as he admitted, it might "sink him beneath the waters of laughter and ridicule," so to-day among us it would doubtless resound in folly if we sought to apply it again in our own field of State life, and to assert that philosophers must become lawyers or lawyers philosophers, if our law is ever to be advanced into its perfect working.
Modern Legal Philosophy Series: Vol. IX
Select Essays by Various Authors
Translations By Ernest Bruncken, Washington, D. C.
And Layton B. Register Of The University Of Pennsylvania Law School
With Introductions By Henry N. Sheldon Former Justice Of The Supreme Judicial Court Of Massachusetts
And By John W. Salmond Solicitor-General Of New Zealand
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