Reddit reviews The Tempting of America
We found 3 Reddit comments about The Tempting of America. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
Used Book in Good Condition
We found 3 Reddit comments about The Tempting of America. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.
The Innocent Man. It was largely responsible for the answer that I give when people ask me why I am an ADA- Someone is going to do this job. I trust myself to question, to work, not to slide into laziness or complacency. I don't trust others to do a job this important. I do it because it matters.
But as for why the law in general? When I was in high school I read The Tempting of America. I could not have disagreed with it more strongly. I STILL inherently disagree with basically the entirety of Robert Bork's jurisprudence. However, it was an eye opener- this is what "the law" is about. It showed me that the law can have both big ideas and petty squabbles, and that they can both be equally interesting.
I'll probably get down voted for this but... try reading "The Tempting of America" by Robert Bork. Yeah, the controversial conservative judge. An upperclassman suggested I read this during my Con Law class, and it was a much more interesting way to understand a lot of the conservative vs. liberal wrangling over cases like Roe v Wade. I think it will be a good read even if you lean to the left.
http://www.amazon.com/The-Tempting-America-Robert-Bork/dp/0684843374
P.S. good choice of careers. Personally I'm pushing my kids to fields like C.S. versus the law.
I am not sure if there is a better source out there, but he did write a book that gives some insight into his legal reasoning that you might find helpful:
"The Tempting of America" Robert Bork
http://www.amazon.com/The-Tempting-America-Robert-Bork/dp/0684843374