reverence for the ruler or God. Michael Gagarin concludes that the public nature of Greek laws has no parallel in the law codes of the ancient Near East.
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The public spirit of community life in early Greece was furthered by substantive legislation, much of which strengthened the authority of the polis over its members. Conversely, one's identity was also determined by membership in the city. This was the case whether the political organization was democratic, aristocratic, oligarchic, or tyrannical. The power of the Greek polis increased at the expense of individual families throughout the archaic period, and the written laws, publicly displayed, served to strengthen not one group or party but all citizens by virtue of their membership in the polis. 6
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In classical Athens, political life was considered the proper business of all citizens. Professionalism was actively discouraged, and the legislative, executive, and judicial functions were exercised by commissions of citizens drawn by lot. Further, citizens were required by law to plead their own cases. 7 Consequently, there were no lawyers as such in classical Athens, 8 although litigation was so prevalent and the rotation of offices so frequent that R. J. Bonner calls Athens a "nation of lawyers." 9 Speech writers, orators, and advocates in certain situations formed the germ of the legal profession, but it was at Rome that law and lawyers would flourish. 10 Greek law itself, says one observer, "failed of fruition." Except for Greek maritime law, the legal science that would influence the world came from Rome. 11
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The great contribution of Greek law to the West was political philosophy. From a very early period the ancient Greeks thought reflectively about how human beings should govern themselves.
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Prefatory to an idea of natural law is the notion of justice itself, that is, that right relations among human beings are subject to principles based on higher than ordinary claims. In tracing the evolution of justice from Homer through Plato, E. A. Havelock shows that although we find no principle of justice ( dikaiosune ) in Homer, there is "just action." The term dike for just action has a
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