Home > Journals > Michigan Law Review > MLR > Volume 24 > Issue 3 (1926)
Abstract
In his Outline of History Mr. Wells comments on the exaggerated estimate which people generally, through reading the Old Testament account, have come to entertain of the wisdom of Solomon and of the glory and prestige of the Israelitish Kingdom during his reign. By way of contrast, the facts, which are readily available and discernable even in the scriptural narrative, reveal this much advertised monarch as a rather insignificant chieftain and his kingdom as a pawn in the policies of his powerful neighbors-a striking example, according to Mr. Wells, of the power of the written assertion over realities in men's minds.
Recommended Citation
Gustavus Ohlinger,
THE POWER OF THE WRITTEN ASSERTION,
24
Mich. L. Rev.
217
(1926).
Available at:
https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr/vol24/iss3/2
Included in
Conflict of Laws Commons, Contracts Commons, Jurisdiction Commons, Jurisprudence Commons