Chapter Four
Photos
Photographs of people, places, and things mentioned in chapter four. The number on the left indicates the page on which the content of the photo is mentioned in the book. Many of the photos also link to additional material.

Page 387 -- Professor Lon Fuller (1902-1978). The Morality of Law, excerpted here, grows out of a famous 1958 exchange between Fuller and H.L.A. Hart in the pages of the Harvard Law Review. Hart was the leading positivist of his time; Fuller argued that law had, and should aspire to, an internal morality.
Page 396 -- Jeremy Bentham (1648-1832), utiitarian and hater of the common law. The link will take you to the webpage of University College London, home of Bentham's "auto-icon."

Page 399 -- Secretariat. Photos of holding companies are hard to find. So, in a trade-off of interest against relevance, here is the 1973 Triple Crown winner, regarded by many as the greatest Thoroughbred racehorse ever. There is a connection: the Chenery family owned Meadow Stable, which bred and raised Secretariat. Photos often show Secretariat with Penny Chenery, who was the daughter of Chris Chenery, one of the principals in the litigation.