Notices
The notice given by a man
When a man gives notice he does so as a lawful decree, announcement, or declaration to all mankind; or to another man about a trespass relating to a wrong, or concerning his property. Notices can also be used to establish standing where a man will separate himself from an implied contract when no consent was given, or alter its terms not withstanding the claim of another man.
The following notice is an example. It makes the police aware of your standing as a man where otherwise for the most part the police only receive training that makes allowance for legal obligations by which a man is not bound unless in relation to the claim of another man.
The invention and impact of paper
At a time in history when goatskin parchment was expensive, and the industrial production and widespread availability of paper did not exist; all the people could do to express they had been harmed was to call out to others to let them know a wrong had been committed. Additionally when property changed hands; all that the people had to evidence a transaction involving land was the ceremony "Livery of seisin." In these cases the people of a town would gather to watch as one man handed another an amount of soil, a twig, key to a building, or other token as evidence of their agreement.
With the start of paper production in 1488 came the widespread availability of paper giving people the ability to communicate in writing. The ceremony Livery of seison could now be cheaply memorialised with the signatures of both men on paper (a deed) and stand both as evidence and as a record the transaction had occurred. Today communication in our courts is almost exclusively done in writing where it stands as documentary evidence of our claim before the court where the facts and evidence are memorialised in writing and stand as a clear reference to what a man claims as the truth.