Reasoning with Law

Reasoning with Law

by Andrew Halpin
Reasoning with Law

Reasoning with Law

by Andrew Halpin

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Overview

The reader is invited to follow a route that visits Fish's view of theory and practice, Raz's legal reasoning thesis, theoretical models of judicial review, Dworkin's right answer thesis, the law of the excluded middle and Lukasiewicz's development of three-valued logic, Wittgenstein's language games, and Moore's metaphysical realism. The destination is the practice at the heart of legal reasoning. It is suggested that this manifests the way in which the limitations of language and the incompleteness of human experience allow the opportunity for coherent development of the law and at the same time produce an inherent incoherence within the law.
The central part of the book seeks to demonstrate how the problems of understanding legal reasoning replicate difficulties encountered in the philosophy of language, but challenges the attempts that have been made to harness approaches from within that discipline to illuminate legal reasoning. Instead it is argued that law provides an unrivalled test-bed for examining the limits of the capacity of our words, and that the study of law may be used to confront in a robust and illuminating manner the limitations of that discipline.
The final chapter considers some of the implications of recognising the incoherence at the heart of legal reasoning, commenting on an institutional approach to law, the legitimacy of law, legal definitions, different approaches to legal reasoning, the role of appellate courts, the general possibility of providing a theoretical model of law, the use of legal rules, and the nature of law's critical aperture.

The book should be of interest to advanced undergraduate students (particularly on jurisprudence courses), postgraduate students, academics, and practitioners concerned to reflect on the nature of the discipline they practice.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781841132440
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/31/2001
Pages: 202
Sales rank: 741,507
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.45(d)

About the Author

Andrew Halpin is Professor of Legal Theory in the School of Law at Swansea University.

Table of Contents

1.Introduction1
Part IPreliminary Studies
2.Law, Theory and Practice: Conflicting Perspectives?7
No Conflict--No Theory7
Preliminary Observations14
Conflicts17
Taking Theory Out of Conflict21
3.Law, Autonomy, and Reason29
Introduction29
Raz's Legal Reasoning Thesis32
The Legal Epithet35
Some Implications41
Wider Issues49
4.A Study on the Judicial Role59
Introduction59
The Theoretical Controversy Concerning Judicial Review60
The Two Models of Judicial Review61
The "Undistributed" or "Excluded" Middle63
"An All Powerful Parliament"68
A Return to the Realm of Fairy Tales73
Replacing Fig Leaves75
Concluding Remarks80
5.Excluded Middles, Right Answers and Vagueness83
Introduction83
Right Answers to Hard Cases84
Some General Reflections92
Vagueness96
Part IIReasoning with Law
6.The Uses of Words103
Introduction103
Commencing an Analysis107
Elementary Analysis of a Term109
General Terms111
An Illustration of Particular/General Terms112
What Fixes a General Term?113
Talking of Ideas116
The Stage We Are At117
7.Some Themes from Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations121
Introduction121
A Simple Overview124
The Model Considered125
The Game of Games133
Conclusion138
8.An Annex on Realism143
9.Words and Concepts151
A Basic Analysis151
Concepts Requiring a Participatory Response156
Determinationes of General Concepts156
Instantiation of Abstract Concepts159
Resolution of Essentially Contestable Concepts160
Conceptions of a Concept162
The Significance of Experience165
Conceptual Development or Conceptual Dislocation168
10.Implications175
Bibliography183
Index195
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