Las razones del Derecho


Book Description

Las Razones del Derecho estudia de manera analítica y crítica las teorías más relevantes desarrolladas a partir de la segunda mitad del siglo XX y que se presentan como precursoras de la teoría contemporánea de la argumentación jurídica. En la primera parte se analizan, la tópica de Viehweg; la nueva retórica de Perelman y la lógica informal de Toulmin. Luego se analizan las contribuciones de Maccormick y de Alexy, que vienen a configurar lo que Atienza denomina la teoría estándar (actual) de la argumentación jurídica. Esta edición recoge, finalmente, un estudio que no aparece en la primera edición y que está referida a las contribuciones del profesor norteamericano Robert Summer. En la última parte del libro, aparecen esbozadas algunas ideas preliminares de una propuesta propia que serían luego desarrolladas en los últimos libros publicados por el autor: El derecho como argumentación y Curso de argumentación Jurídica. Manuel Atienza es Catedratico de Filosofia del Derecho en la Universidad de Alicante, España.




Las razones del derecho


Book Description




Las razones sustantivas y la interpretación del Derecho en el common law


Book Description

La obra incluye tres trabajos fundamentales del Profesor Summers sobre teoría de la argumentación y la interpretación en los sistemas del Common law. El trabajo más importante de Summers dedicado al razonamiento jurídico es un artículo del año 1978. ROBERT S. SUMMERS (1933-2019), fue profesor McRoberts de Derecho en la Universidad de Cornell, Ithaca, N.Y. De gran prestigio internacional por su trabajo en contratos, derecho comercial, jurisprudencia y teoría del Derecho. Fue autor y coautor de múltiples trabajos en estos campos, por los cuales recibió diversos títulos honoríficos y otros reconocimientos. Su tratado sobre el Uniform Commercial Code, en coautoría con James White, es el más citado sobre el tema por tribunales y académicos. Se desempeñó como asesor oficial tanto de la Comisión de Redacción para el Código Civil Ruso y a la Comisión Redactora del Código Civil Egipcio. En el ámbito de la teoría del derecho publicó, entre otros libros: Interpreting Precedent. A Comparative Study, en colaboración con N. MacCormick (1997), Form and Substance in Anglo-American Law, en colaboración con P.S. Atiyah (1987), Lon L. Fuller (1984), Instrumentalism and American Legal Theory (1982).




El derecho como argumentación


Book Description

La dimensión argumentativa del Derecho - El Derecho como argumentación - es una clave esencial para entender a fondo muchos problemas de la teoría del Derecho y para actuar con sentido en el contexto de las diversas prácticas jurídicas de los Estados constitucionales. Dar cuenta de esa dimensión exige, por lo demás, una teoría compleja en la que se integren los componentes formales, materiales y pragmáticos (retóricos y dialécticos) de la argumentación. Manuel Atienza es catedrático de filosofía del Derecho en la Universidad de Alicante y director de la revista DOXA. Ha publicado varios libros sobre argumentación: Las razones del Derecho (Madrid, 1991), Tras la justicia (Barcelona, 1993), Derecho y argumentación (Bogotá, 1997) y La guerra de las falacias (Alicante, 1999). Es también autor (con Juan Ruiz Manero) de Las piezas del Derecho (Barcelona, 1996) e Ilícitos atípicos (Madrid, 2000)




Reasons for Action and the Law


Book Description

A focus on reasons for action and practical reason is the perspective chosen by many contemporary legal philosophers for the analysis of some central questions of their discipline. This book offers a critical evaluation of that approach, by carefully examining the empirical, logical and normative problems hidden behind the concepts of `reason for action' and `practical reasoning'. Unlike most other works in this field, it is a meta-theoretical study which analyses and compares how different theories use the notion of reason in their reconstruction of problems concerning issues such as normativity, the acceptance of norms, or the justification of judicial decisions. This book is directed primarily to scholars specializing in legal theory and concerned with the contribution practical philosophy can make to it, but it also contains important arguments and insights for all those interested in the controversy between legal positivists and their critics, in the theory of human action or in reason-based practical theories in general.




Reasonableness and interpretation


Book Description

The 2002 issue of the Yearbook concerns the notion of reasonableness in philosohical, legal and economic domains. After going back over the main definition of the concept of reasonable in greek philosophy, the analysis carried out in this volume deals with the role played by the notion of reasonableness in practical philosophy and namely according to hermeneutical view of it. With regard to legal field, the notion of reasonableness is a core notion in constitutional law and it assumes specific meanings in private, criminal, international, and administrative law. Reasonableness turns out to be crucial with regard to many topics, such as interpretation of rights, balancing of fundamental rights, and interpretation of standards.




The Theory and Practice of Legislation


Book Description

This work provides a rational framework for legislation. The unifying premise behind the essays is that, although legislation and regulation are the result of a political process, legislation and regulation can be the object of theoretical study. The volume focuses on problems that are common to most European legal systems and the approach involves applying to legislative problems the tools of legal theory - hence 'legisprudence'. Whereas traditional legal theory deals predominantly with the application of law by the judge, legisprudence enlarges the field of study so as to include the creation of law by the legislator. The original essays published in this collection expose and develop a range of new insights into the relationship between legislative problems and legal theory in a way which will engage and interest legal scholars throughout the world.




'Rule of Reason': Ensayos Teóricos sobre Racionalidad y Razonabilidad en el Derecho Público


Book Description

Investigating the principle of reasona-bleness in the legal world requires—if the task is to be taken seriously—to take a journey directly to the roots of the concept of law and to the ultimate paradigms that inform its knowledge, just to find the beginning of a different and maybe harder path, heading to the idea of reason. The essays presented in this book do not aim to complete such journeys, but just to take some modest steps into them. Many con-cepts are thereby found, many more are left to be investigated. Meanwhile, between rationality and reasonableness, theory and practice, science and prudence, episteme and phronesis, a global need emerges: that to keep addressing the core of the ‘Rule of Reason’ in the law.




Interpretation Des Heiligen


Book Description

The hermeneutic path involved in the interpretation of law as well as in the interpretation of sacred texts, though peculiar, seems - as Emilio Betti pointed out - to share several things, most importantly the "normative" nature of interpretation. The 1999 issue of the Yearbook "Ars Interpretandi" accounts for the several and disparate relationships between these two important "regional hermeneutics".




Natural Law


Book Description

Modern moral and political philosophy is in debt with natural law theory, both in its ancient and mediaeval elaborations. While the very notion of a natural law has proved highly controversial among 20th Century scholars, the last decades have witnessed a renewed interest in it. Indeed, the threats and challenges as result of multiculturalism, plural societies and global changes have generated a renewed attention to natural law theory. Clearly, it offers solid basis as possible framework to a better understanding of human goods without contradictions and partial bias. The purpose of the present volume is to provide an overview of the history of this concept (Cicero, St. Paul, Aquinas, Melanchthon, Montaigne, Descartes, Leibniz, Hume, Burke, Kant, MacIntyre, etc.) as well as a deep understanding of ongoing research, both in Europe and in America. Furthermore, the specificity of these studies will be of particular value to philosophers, law-philosophers, historians, anthropologists, sociologists and theologians, and those concerned on such issues as the relation between law and moral norm, law and practical reason, and the presence of the idea of natural law in several prominent thinkers. It includes a selected bibliography on natural law. The book also provides an excellent introduction to several of the major topics in natural law theory making it useful both as a reference text and as a sourcebook for academics alike. "Natural law is a rich, complex, and highly disputed term. Since its first appearances in the history of Western civilization, it has been used both to point to God as the source of the moral order and to assert that there is an objective order of justice in nature that men and their laws ought to respect. In modern times, natural law theory gave birth to what we usually call “human rights.” Unlike the meaning of the term, the importance of an ongoing debate on natural law and on the theories related to it is undisputable. This is why I welcome today this new collection of essays edited by Alejandro Néstor García Martínez, Mario Šilar and José M. Torralba. Natural Law: Historical, Systematic and Juridical Approaches includes a wide variety of studies, covering key authors and issues in natural law theory. Younger students will appreciate the clarity of the chapters, and more trained readers the detailed and accurate bibliographical references that each of them offers. The editors’s choice to go from a historical approach to contemporary theories, and then to theoretical and more practical issues is also commendable. Students in philosophy and in legal theory will greatly benefit from this book." —Fulvio Di Blasi, author of God and the Natural Law: A Rereading of Thomas Aquinas