A
"scholarly treatise" refers to a detailed and in-depth piece of writing created by an academic or expert in a particular field. It typically involves thorough research, analysis, and provides new insights or theories on a specific subject.
Full definition
Colson and Eckerd may not have written the definitive
scholarly treatise on America's woes, but they have something important to contribute to our public argument.
I expected Citizen Canine to be a somewhat dry,
scholarly treatise of these topics, and I couldn't have been more wrong.
In my view, it was Judge Weeramantry's
scholarly treatise on Contract Law in 1966 in two volumes that won him what I may call the «Oscar» in the legal field.
Like Martin, Malcolm did not write
a scholarly treatise on the theme of blackness and self.
That being said, however, The Family in the Modern Age is
a scholarly treatise and manifesto that should be cheered by friends of liberal democracy.
Kahn sides with pitching, and in a narrative that is both analytical and anecdotal, he rewards the reader with what amounts to
a scholarly treatise on the craft.
I would continue
my scholarly treatise by claiming that, curiously enough, green acts in this text as the quintessential essence of that - which - can - not - be-represented-in-art.
Still, in the weekly alerts I receive of new law books released in the United States and Canada, as many as half the new titles will regularly be casebooks, at prices often significantly higher than those of
scholarly treatises, and all aimed at a student market.
From where I sit, I was concerned
the scholarly treatises were being «loose leafized» but it sounds like I may be wrong.