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The Dialectical Path of Law discusses the origin of law leading to the development of advanced corporate law intertwined with the formation of technical tax rules. Lincoln explores the recent developments of the OECD and United States tax rules within a hardly discussed context in legal academia - the Hegelian dialectic.
List of contents
Chapter 1: Anthropological Structuralism and Law
Chapter 2: Towards More Memes of Theories
Chapter 3: Is there a "Jungian Archetype" of Government? Structuralism and Constitutional Forms of Government in a Post-Modern World.
Chapter 4: What Is Money? The Debt - Promise to Pay - Answer to Anthropological Legal and Historical Analysis
Chapter 5: An Example Discussed
Chapter 6: Complication: Compare and Contrast the Policies of the U.S. Precedent as Outlined in Regard to Risk Allocation to BEPS Action 9 Report on Risk Allocation
Chapter 7: The Swerve to the Future
Chapter 8: Reason (1) U.S. Constitutional Policy Regarding International Law and the Concept of Stare Decisis
Chapter 9: Reason (2): Following the Concept of Stare Decisis: Summary of U.S. Tax Court Precedent on Transfer Pricing Regarding Risk Allocation
Chapter 10: Reason (3) The U.S. Tax Court Will Not Apply Action 9: Amazon Re-Examined, And the IRS's Unwillingness and Inability to Apply OECD's Action 9 Recommendations on Risk Analysis
Chapter 11: Compare and Contrast Current U.S. Precedent to BEPS Action 9 Report on Risk Allocation
Chapter 12: The Conclusion and Possible Answers to Chapters 5 through 11
Chapter 13: Policy Questions for the Future
Chapter 14: Can the System of Money and Debt Be a Sanctuary Legally?
Conclusion: Gödel, Escher, And Wittgenstein? The End of Philosophy and Linguistic Analysis of Law
About the author
By Charles Lincoln
Summary
The Dialectical Path of Law discusses the origin of law leading to the development of advanced corporate law intertwined with the formation of technical tax rules. Lincoln explores the recent developments of the OECD and United States tax rules within a hardly discussed context in legal academia - the Hegelian dialectic.