Archive Index

Browse the publication

Move between essays, the shelf, highlights, and the observatory without losing the editorial thread.

Cover of 101 Things I Learned® in Law School
books

101 Things I Learned® in Law School

Vibeke Norgaard Martin, Matthew Frederick

2 highlights

Highlights & Annotations

Don’t try to prove you are objectively right; show that your position is preferable to the alternative.

Ref. 3033-A

An argument requires logic, but legal argument is not a purely logical form of argument that promises a universal, absolute conclusion. Rather, it is a practical form of argument that aims to establish one claim as more probable or reasonable than another.

Ref. CD8F-B