1. The Origins of Reasonable Doubt: Theological Roots of the Criminal Trial;See E G;Of Time, Passion, and Knowledge: Reflections on the Strategy of Existence,1970
2. Supplementum Epigraphicum GraecumDelphi. 176, n. 137, vs. 9/10 corr. id. l. c. 25
3. See Part 2(b). Natural law and the moral order are now seen as the same thing by positivists. HART, The Concept of Law 185. (? a question [that is said to concern the relation between law and morals] ? may still be illuminatingly described as the issue between Natural Law and Legal Positivism, though each of these titles has come to be used for a range of different theses about law and morals). I do not mean to refer to any of the theories known as "prudentialism;Jeremy Waldron;The Cambridge History of Nineteenth Century Philosophy,2007