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A Treatise of Legal Philosophy and General Jurisprudenc

Enrico Pattaro Hubert Rottleuthner Roger A. Shiner Aleksander Peczenik Giovanni Sartor

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Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2005 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-4020-3387-2

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4020-3505-0

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer 2005

Tabla de contenidos

Potestative Concepts

Enrico Pattaro; Hubert Rottleuthner; Roger A. Shiner; Aleksander Peczenik; Giovanni Sartor

Our extensive analysis of normative conditionals (see Chapters 20 and 21) enables us to introduce a new family of normative concepts, which we call concepts (from the Latin word , “power”) since they are base the notion of a .

Part II - Legal Logic | Pp. 1554-1564

Proclamations

Enrico Pattaro; Hubert Rottleuthner; Roger A. Shiner; Aleksander Peczenik; Giovanni Sartor

Often the law enables us to achieve normative results through a , that is, by expressing our intention to achieve such results, exactly in order to achieve them. After presenting this phenomenon, we shall introduce the notion of a , which expresses the general idea of the intentional production of normative results.

Part II - Legal Logic | Pp. 1565-1587

Proclamative Power

Enrico Pattaro; Hubert Rottleuthner; Roger A. Shiner; Aleksander Peczenik; Giovanni Sartor

The notion of a proclamation leads us to the general idea of a , namely, the power to achieve, through a proclamation, exactly what one is proclaiming.

Part II - Legal Logic | Pp. 1588-1610

Normative Texts and Sources of Law

Enrico Pattaro; Hubert Rottleuthner; Roger A. Shiner; Aleksander Peczenik; Giovanni Sartor

In this chapter we shall provide some applications and extensions of the notion of a . We shall first consider that a proclamative power—besides being the ability to realise (determine) certain results—also consists in the ability to make certain normative texts become binding. This will lead us to address briefly the notion of . Then we shall try to develop a broad notion of , which goes beyond the exercise of a proclamative power.

Part II - Legal Logic | Pp. 1611-1641

Argumentation Frameworks

Enrico Pattaro; Hubert Rottleuthner; Roger A. Shiner; Aleksander Peczenik; Giovanni Sartor

In this chapter we shall integrate the logical tools we have so far introduced in order to provide a broader picture of , namely, the ratiocinative process through which a reasoner reaches justified legal conclusions.

Part II - Legal Logic | Pp. 1642-1667

Argument Logic

Enrico Pattaro; Hubert Rottleuthner; Roger A. Shiner; Aleksander Peczenik; Giovanni Sartor

In Chapter 26 we have analysed the notion of an argument and we have discussed various possible interactions between arguments. In particular, we have seen that arguments may collide, that collisions may determine defeat, and that further collisions may reinstate the defeated arguments.

Part II - Legal Logic | Pp. 1668-1707

Cases and Theory Construction

Enrico Pattaro; Hubert Rottleuthner; Roger A. Shiner; Aleksander Peczenik; Giovanni Sartor

This chapter addresses in the legal domain by merging various ideas we have discussed in the previous pages: heuresis, rationalisation, preferential reasoning, teleology, factor-based reasoning, and argumentation.

Part II - Legal Logic | Pp. 1708-1722

Theory-Based Dialectics

Enrico Pattaro; Hubert Rottleuthner; Roger A. Shiner; Aleksander Peczenik; Giovanni Sartor

This chapter is dedicated to the application of the idea of theory construction (as defined in Chapter 28) to the dynamical modelling of case-based reasoning. First we illustrate our basic model of case-based reasoning, and then we provide various extensions and refinements of it.

Part II - Legal Logic | Pp. 1723-1761

Conclusion

Enrico Pattaro; Hubert Rottleuthner; Roger A. Shiner; Aleksander Peczenik; Giovanni Sartor

The Greek poet and librarian Callimachus famously criticised a lengthy work (the poem , by Apollonius of Rhodes), saying that “a big book is a big evil.”

- Conclusion | Pp. 1762-1763