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Looking for words about justice in classic legal works!

There is a famous British legal maxim: "Justice must not only be achieved, but it must be achieved in a way that people can see"

Bacon has a famous saying: "An unfair judicial decision It is more serious than repeated unfair actions, because these unfair actions only pollute the water, and unfair referees ruin the source of the water."

German jurist Gustav Ladd. Chapter 22 of "Aphorisms of Legal Wisdom" (1963 edition) by Bruch (1878-1949). The time mark after the first paragraph is when Radbruch made the statement.

One of the requirements of the legal profession is that there must be a constant awareness of the noble and deep problems of the profession. (1947)

The most difficult thing for those of us in the legal profession to do is to have faith in the profession on which we live while at the same time remaining true to our deepest nature. This was repeatedly interrogated. (1929)

Strict legal professionals not only like the mockers who paint all kinds of ironic question marks and exclamation marks on the margins of the code, but also like the brooding poets who Touch the foundations of justice with human questions, such as Tolstoy, Tostoevsky, or those great judicial caricatures, who are both mockers and brooders: Daumier ). (1929)

The great skeptics of legal science and the value of law: Tolstoy, Daumier, Anatole France, and Kirchmann, for For those who are growing up in the legal profession, they are valuable reminders of self-examination. Because only those legal professionals who have a guilty conscience can become good legal professionals. (1949)

No young legal professional is immune to the conflict between his heart and his knowledge (science). Some of them directly go through the stage of hating their profession, which is nothing. The worst thing. (1929)

What may happen to a legal professional is that one day he finally realizes that he has given the world a rich variety of colors with seven meager basic hues. (1929)

However, legal professionals may not necessarily know during their studies or throughout their lives: law is not only a necessity of life, but also a kind of spirit; legal scholarship is not only A craft, but also a nurturing value; it cannot be said that these are opposites: the serious one, magic, the light one, art; there are also some legal academics, which are also light art themselves, the legal festival book of the classic legal writer, People study these books not for work, but for edification and fun. (1929)

Only a person who has been cultivated (trained) can become a truly capable legal professional. (1929)

Paying attention to the logical principles (factors) in legal methods distinguishes those legal professionals who accidentally enter the legal profession from those who are born in the legal profession. (1904)

The work of legal professionals is a kind of rational work, which is to regulate chaotic and ambiguous interpersonal relationships through the analysis of concepts. (1919)

There is some truth in the joke that the legal professional knows everything, for he wants to intervene in virtually any controversy, even on topics with which he is still unfamiliar (i.e. Experience in mastering how to argue opinions) is also willing to participate in discussions. (1924)

First of all, we should raise this question for legal professionals: On this planet where we humans live and settle, should chance or reason rule? (1932)

The legal class must feel that it is a huge human rights alliance above all parties, and must have a unified sense of anger to oppose any violation of law no matter by whom or against whom; oppose People who always want to break the law do not do it for the sake of the victim, but for the sake of the law itself, and this is where the legal class makes its home. (1919)

Only those who are born to engage in the career of judges are rigidly aware that judges are not slaves of justice, but servants of the stability of the law. (1929)

A legal order can survive only when the identified members of the legal community practice legal concepts not based on their special interests, but on the basis of the legal order.

(1947)

If there is no core strength in the nation to be called upon, they are not familiar with the law in order to bear legal responsibility: that is, if there is no legal class, no legal order can exist. (1947)

The profession of a lawyer is a profession for men. Young people who are growing up always have estrangement and resistance to this profession; the more they want to become men, the less they care about their career. The less they have deep and passionate love; the more they moan in their youth, the more likely they are to become rebels. (1934)

We may calmly admit that women are generally less capable than men of the standard of dispassionate objectivity which is indeed indispensable to the application of the law; but it should also be categorically emphasized. : Women possess to a higher degree than men some other characteristics which are not altogether unprofitable in the application of the law. (1922)

My own inner sense of law demands that I devote myself to the legal orders of the authorities; I always only ask what is legal, but never whether it should also be just ; in one's own profession, it is very possible to serve injustice, even if it is not impossible to actively love justice: this is the human task and sorrow of the legal profession. (1929)