The excuse that interrogates this writing is to venture - given the conditions imposed by globalization - if a critical hermeneutics of the law is possible, one that places human rights as the primary rule of the whole legal discourse, thus displacing them from their adjacent and instrumental condition. We are faced with the proposal to understand human rights as the fundamental moment of all legal epistemology and as a constituent condition of any provision, norm or constituted criterion. The Grundnorm has acquired its status as a fundamental and most hermeneutic promontory, empowered and instilled by a set of framework norms, primary and fundamental criteria of law, which would be identified with what we will call human rights. In order t...