SORU: aşağıdaki parçaya göre cevaplayınız
As can be understood from the passage, the laws of a country, ----.
We commonly speak of both law and laws, and these
terms, though not used with precision, point to two
different aspects under which legal science may be
approached. The laws of a country are thought of as
separate, distinct, individual rules; the law of a
country, however much we may analyse it into
separate rules, is something more than the mere sum
of such rules. It is, rather, a whole, a system which
orders our conduct and in which the separate rules
have their place and their relation to each other and
to the whole. Moreover, it is never completely
exhausted by any analysis, however far the analysis
may be pushed, and however much the analysis may
be necessary to our understanding of the whole.
Thus, each rule which we call a law is part of the
whole we call the law. Lawyers generally speak of
law; laymen more often of laws.