Let me begin by taking up three issues raised by Professor Seaton: (1) the relationship between interpretation and intention; (2) the relationship between literary and legal study; and (3) the relationship between theoretical accounts of a practice-law, literature, or anything else-and the performance of that practice. For Professor Seaton, these and related topics fall under the general rubric of theories of interpretation, and he promises at the beginning of his paper to explore the theories of interpretation articulated by Dworkin, Fish, and Posner. The first thing to say is that I don\u27t have a theory of interpretation, or, rather, my argument concerning interpretation is that it is not the kind of thing you could have a theory abou...
The following is an attempt to view and perceive the problematic act of interpretation, including i...
We have, almost all of us, I think, been brought up in the belief that the interpretation of legal d...
One of Ronald Dworkin’s most important contributions to legal theory is the claim that anyone wishin...
Interpretation is fashionable, and not just in jurisprudence. Yet for all the attention interpretati...
In law, problems of interpretation can be explored at different levels of generality. At the most sp...
Abstract. The core idea of Davidson’s philosophy of language is that a theory of truth constructed a...
Interpretation is a familiar feature of law and legal practice. For some legal theorists, interpreta...
Textualism is a very general and abstract term that represents a variety of views about the interpr...
Lawyers hanker after authority. Whether it be in enforcing the law or justifying law\u27s institutio...
Among other achievements, the modern law-as-literature movement has prompted increasing numbers of l...
To interpret is to seek understanding. This formulation hides as much as it reveals and I propose to...
For any given rule, there are infinite interpretations. Yet law and interpretation are inseparable. ...
This essay argues that Intentionalism\u27s definition of interpretation entails nothing about the le...
This paper seeks to give an account of what could be involved in interpreting a theory. The aim is t...
Some people believe that the very idea of interpretation requires judges to adopt a particular metho...
The following is an attempt to view and perceive the problematic act of interpretation, including i...
We have, almost all of us, I think, been brought up in the belief that the interpretation of legal d...
One of Ronald Dworkin’s most important contributions to legal theory is the claim that anyone wishin...
Interpretation is fashionable, and not just in jurisprudence. Yet for all the attention interpretati...
In law, problems of interpretation can be explored at different levels of generality. At the most sp...
Abstract. The core idea of Davidson’s philosophy of language is that a theory of truth constructed a...
Interpretation is a familiar feature of law and legal practice. For some legal theorists, interpreta...
Textualism is a very general and abstract term that represents a variety of views about the interpr...
Lawyers hanker after authority. Whether it be in enforcing the law or justifying law\u27s institutio...
Among other achievements, the modern law-as-literature movement has prompted increasing numbers of l...
To interpret is to seek understanding. This formulation hides as much as it reveals and I propose to...
For any given rule, there are infinite interpretations. Yet law and interpretation are inseparable. ...
This essay argues that Intentionalism\u27s definition of interpretation entails nothing about the le...
This paper seeks to give an account of what could be involved in interpreting a theory. The aim is t...
Some people believe that the very idea of interpretation requires judges to adopt a particular metho...
The following is an attempt to view and perceive the problematic act of interpretation, including i...
We have, almost all of us, I think, been brought up in the belief that the interpretation of legal d...
One of Ronald Dworkin’s most important contributions to legal theory is the claim that anyone wishin...