In 1818, in a New York City courtroom, the case of Maurice v. Judd posed an apparently straightforward question: Was whale oil fish oil, and therefore subject to state inspection and taxation? As expert witnesses testified, however, the trial quickly became a passionate public debate on the order of nature and the supremacy of man. In the fascinating "Trying Leviathan: The Nineteenth-Century New York Court Case That Put the Whale on Trial and Challenged the Order of Nature" (Princeton University, $29.95), D. Graham Burnett describes the trial, its undercurrents, and its repercussions with sublime wit and consummate skill....
Who Says A Civil Trial Lacks Drama?
Blowing the status quo out of the water. So who is D. Graham Burnett? Well, he just wrote a book which the Boston Globe describes like this:
Something different to end today's posts. The Boston Globe published an interview with D. Graham Burnett under the rather startling headline of
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