Ethics in Service

audiobook

Ethics in Service

by William H. (William Howard) Taft

EN·~2 hours

Chapters

Description

Delivered as a series of lectures to a graduating class at a leading university, this work opens by tracing the long‑standing relationship between law and society. Drawing on examples from ancient Jewish, Roman and English traditions, the speaker shows how the legal profession has long served as a bridge between individual rights and collective order. He argues that a paid, adversarial system remains the most practical means of achieving justice, while urging listeners to see the profession as a moral enterprise as well as a technical one.

Turning to the present, the author describes a growing public distrust of the courts and the perception that lawyers often distort truth for profit. With experience as both a practitioner and a judge, he calls for a careful re‑examination of ethical rules that can restore confidence without demanding impossible perfection. The tone is sober and hopeful, emphasizing gradual, reasoned reform grounded in historical lessons.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (133K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Bryan Ness, Colin Bell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print project.)

Release date

2006-12-09

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William H. (William Howard) Taft

William H. (William Howard) Taft

1857–1930

Remembered as the only person to serve both as U.S. president and chief justice of the Supreme Court, he spent much of his life moving between politics, law, and public service. His career stretched from Ohio courts to the White House and then to the nation's highest bench.

View all books