Professor Sinnott-Armstrong argues against the arguments published by Professor Prakash and Professor Alexander in an article on legal interpretation in which they defended the thesis that all interpretation properly so-called seeks to uncover the intended meaning of the author(s). Against their arguments, the Author defends coherence and importance of word meaning. In Part I, he more precisely defines the these that Alexander and Prakash deny and Professor Sinnott-Armstrong defends. In Part II, he will show why Alexander and Prakash\u27s arguments fail to rule out word meanings. In PArt III, he will put these debates in a larger theoretical context and show why word meaning is important to legal interpretation
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Corpus linguistics is more than just a new tool for legal interpretation. Work in corpus linguistics...
We have, almost all of us, I think, been brought up in the belief that the interpretation of legal d...
Textualism is a very general and abstract term that represents a variety of views about the interpr...
This essay argues that Intentionalism\u27s definition of interpretation entails nothing about the le...
Not only does linguistics fail to illuminate the meaning of legal texts, the approach to meaning tak...
Statutory interpretation involves an interpreter determining the meaning of the text on the basis of...
This essay is intended to engage some of the controversies that have emerged in legal philosophy con...
Many theorists take the view that literal meaning can be one of a number of factors to be weighed i...
It is often thought that the meaning of a legal provision must reside in the minds of its authors or...
Professor Alexander provides a brief introduction to the 2004 Editors\u27 Symposium titled What is ...
Textualism is a very general and abstract term that represents a variety of views about the interpr...
The Court uses the words mean and meaning in a number of ways. The difficulty with this is that ther...
My response to these hypotheticals is going to be useless, although, I hope, in a useful way. It’s ...
Language shapes and reflects how we think about the world. It engages and intrigues us. Our everyday...
This paper presents a preliminary analysis of the potential application of literary theory and cogni...
Corpus linguistics is more than just a new tool for legal interpretation. Work in corpus linguistics...
We have, almost all of us, I think, been brought up in the belief that the interpretation of legal d...
Textualism is a very general and abstract term that represents a variety of views about the interpr...
This essay argues that Intentionalism\u27s definition of interpretation entails nothing about the le...
Not only does linguistics fail to illuminate the meaning of legal texts, the approach to meaning tak...
Statutory interpretation involves an interpreter determining the meaning of the text on the basis of...
This essay is intended to engage some of the controversies that have emerged in legal philosophy con...
Many theorists take the view that literal meaning can be one of a number of factors to be weighed i...
It is often thought that the meaning of a legal provision must reside in the minds of its authors or...
Professor Alexander provides a brief introduction to the 2004 Editors\u27 Symposium titled What is ...
Textualism is a very general and abstract term that represents a variety of views about the interpr...