Patrick Atiyah

Patrick Selim Atiyah, QC FBA (5 March 1931 – 30 March 2018) was an English lawyer and academic. He was best known for his work as a common lawyer, particularly in the law of contract and for advocating reformation or abolition of the law of tort. He was made a Fellow of the British Academy in 1979.

Biography

Atiyah was a son of the Lebanese writer Edward Atiyah and his Scottish wife Jean. The well-known mathematician Sir Michael Atiyah was his brother. His youngest son Jeremy died on 12 April 2006 while walking in Italy.[1][2]

Atiyah was professor of law at the Australian National University (1970–1973), at the University of Warwick (1973–1977) and professor of English law at the University of Oxford (1977–1988).

He died on 30 March 2018 at the age of 87.[3]

Bibliography

Books
  • Essays on Contract (1986), Oxford University Press, Digital Reproduction available at Google Books (2001)
  • Atiyah's Accidents, Compensation and the Law (1970), now (2006) and updated by Peter Cane
  • The Rise and Fall of Freedom of Contract (1979) Oxford University Press
  • Promises, Morals, and Law (1983) Oxford University Press
  • Form and Substance in Anglo-American Law (1987).
  • An Introduction to the Law of Contract (1995 5th Ed.) Clarendon Law Series, now updated by Stephen Smith.
  • The Damages Lottery (1997) Hart Publishing.
Articles
  • ‘Economic Duress and the Overborne Will’ (1982) 98 LQR 197. Atiyah argued that it was wrong to use the phrase ‘coercion of the will’ in the test for duress. Duress does not eliminate free choice, it just creates a choice between evils. What is wrong about a contract is not an absence of consent, but the wrongful nature of the threats used to bring about consent.
gollark: Eventually.
gollark: AMD... does not do this.
gollark: Nvidia push CUDA adoption by having a pretty good AI research team make things which indirectly use CUDA.
gollark: Inertia, and it actually works and Nvidia makes useful things with it.
gollark: CUDA is actually used everywhere for goodish reasons, though.

See also

Notes

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