What do the ten commandments do? A study of lawyers' semiotics
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Dennis Kurzon
Abstract
Against the background of two U.S. Supreme Court cases in 2005 on the question of the public display of the Ten Commandments in the context of the establishment of religion clause of the First Amendment to the Constitution, the article addresses the way the lawyers, especially the judges, discussed the status of the Ten Commandments as a text and as a symbol. The article relates to the legal arguments concerning such religious texts, and the ways in which decisions in favor of the public display of apparently religious symbols may be distinguished from decisions against their display. While many of the judges did not distinguish between text and symbol, those that did tackled these issues ‘semiotically’ — without using technical terminology.
© 2008 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin
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Articles in the same Issue
- Théorie du récit et sémiotique: apport d'A. J. Greimas et nouvelles propositions
- Comments regarding Charles Sanders Peirce's notion of consciousness, abduction, and the hypo-icon metaphor
- Purification of medical terms in Turkish: A study on the significance of mother tongue for language and thought
- Terminological equivalence in legal translation: A semiotic approach
- Dissent and environmental communication: A semiotic approach
- From frontrunners, to paper dolls, to fiends: Semiotic analyses of premeditated teacher images
- Wittgenstein as Mastersinger
- Ambiguity and metaphor
- Emotion and community in a semeiotic perspective
- Saussure and the elusive question of the origin
- Towards applied semiotics: An analysis of iconic gestural signs regarding physics teaching in the light of theatre semiotics
- Resistance and rescue in Beauvoir's The Blood of Others and The Mandarins: A semiotic contribution to the thinking of the ‘being-for-other’ existential category
- Communication resources and the consequences of linguistic censorship
- Whewell's metaphorical usage of light and the ultimate reality underlying it
- What do the ten commandments do? A study of lawyers' semiotics
- Narcissus in language: A semiotic contrast of natural and computer language through self-reference
- Multi safe compound constructions: A reply to Anders Søgaard
- On the linguistic expression of subjectivity: Towards a sign-centered approach
- Semiotics and ancient history
- Textual mapping of imitation and intertextuality in college and university mission statements: A new institutional perspective
- Catchments, growth points, and the iterability of signs in classroom communication
- The role of structures in semiotic systems: Analysis of some ideas of Leonardo da Vinci and the portrait Lady with an Ermine
- Biosemiotics: Protoscience, interdiscipline, new biology
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