Law and Opinion in Scotland during the Seventeenth Century is a work of major importance in Scottish legal historiography, and indeed is of a broader significance. The other two volumes of the proposed series will be eagerly anticipated. Adelyn L. M. Wilson Edinburgh Law Review Vol. 12, 2008 ...the reader will find the detailed results of immense scholarship and an invaluable resource for those with a need more clearly to understand the Scottish writings of the seventeenth century. James McNeill Jersey and Guernsey Law Review October 2008, Vol 12 [This book] can be regarded without qualification as a remarkable work of the most fundamental importance. It not only transforms understanding of the subject but also of the nature of the analysis which can profitably be brought to bear on the pursuit of that understanding. It is a work of extraordinary range and originality, exhibiting a degree of scholarship which is simply breathtaking in scope and depth, and based on an immensely detailed and considered treatment of manuscript and printed historical sources which transcends any previous work on the subject...The book is relevant to all legal historians of early modern Europe, not only Scotland or England. Mark Godfrey The Journal of Legal History vol 29, No 3, December 2008