The Open court . ion of Saints, ^y Professor Fiatningo. Illustrated. (September.)The Unrecorded Sayings of Jesus Christ. Thoroughly compiled. (September.) Symposia on Religious and Ethical Subjects. A Controversy on Buddhism. The Rt. Rev. Sltalsii Soyen, Kamakura, Japan, the Rev. Dr. John Henry Bar- ro%vs, Chicago, 111., the Rev. Dr. F. F. Ellinivood, New York There More Than One Buddhism? By H. Cogitations of a Smoking Philosopher. By Canon G. J. Buddhist Priests View of Relics. By Rev. C. A. Seelakkhandlia. Philosophical and Scientific. Lamarck and Neo-Lamarcki


The Open court . ion of Saints, ^y Professor Fiatningo. Illustrated. (September.)The Unrecorded Sayings of Jesus Christ. Thoroughly compiled. (September.) Symposia on Religious and Ethical Subjects. A Controversy on Buddhism. The Rt. Rev. Sltalsii Soyen, Kamakura, Japan, the Rev. Dr. John Henry Bar- ro%vs, Chicago, 111., the Rev. Dr. F. F. Ellinivood, New York There More Than One Buddhism? By H. Cogitations of a Smoking Philosopher. By Canon G. J. Buddhist Priests View of Relics. By Rev. C. A. Seelakkhandlia. Philosophical and Scientific. Lamarck and Neo-Lamarckianism. By Prof. A. S. Packard. Popular articles by the First Atithorities are constantly appearing on all scientific and philosophicalquestions. Announcements. Ethnological Jurisprudence. By the late Judge On the Philosophy of Science. Prof. Ernst Mach, Post of Bremen. Vienna. On Money. By Count Leo Tolstoi. On General Ideas. Th. Ribot, Recreations, etc. THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING CO., ,.^^^^^ LEONHARD EULEK. (1707-1783.) The Open Court. The Open Court A MONTHLY MAGAZINE Devoted to the Science of Religion, the Religion of Science, andthe Extension of the Religious Parliament Idea. VOL. XI. (no. II.) NOVEMBER, 1897. NO. 498 AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF ETH-NOLOGICAL JURISPRUDENCE. BY THE LATE JUSTICE ALBERT HERMANN POST. ETHNOLOGICAL JURISPRUDENCE, the most recent branchof the science of law, so richly elaborated by every method ofresearch, has still to battle for its existence. Wide circles in theworld of juridical learning utterly ignore it, or assume a hostileand at best sceptical attitude towards it. Neither the history oflaw nor the philosophy of jurisprudence has accorded it scientificrecognition, and even the tenability of the principles upon whichit is based has been characterised as highly questionable. It is universally true that every new departure in science atfirst meets with opposition, and that it cannot aspire to recogni-tion until it is i


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade188, booksubjectreligion, bookyear1887