The article proposes an intuitive approach to the so-called ‘hard cases’ in law as an alternative to traditional legal-theoretical accounts of this phenomenon. The main thesis of the intuitive approach is that all judgments and decisions made in a legal setting – including both legal practice and legal theory – are intuition-based. Hence, conceptualizations of legal phenomena can be made more accurate if they are constructed with the use of scientific knowledge on the role of intuition in legal reasoning. An exemplification of this approach is presented in the context of ‘hard cases’. Traditional legal-theoretical accounts of the latter, such as Hart’s and Dworkin’s, are juxtaposed with the Representational Change Theory of Insight. The pro...
The purpose of this Article is to describe a pluralistic model of reasoning that may be used to teac...
Stare decisis is a fundamental principle of case-based reasoning. Yet its application varies in comp...
In this essay, the author attempts to reveal the character and theoretical limits of judicial formal...
ON A JUDGE’S INTUITIVE DECISIONSSummaryThe paper discusses the credibility of legal decisions taken ...
Judicial intuition is misunderstood. Labeled as cognitive bias, it is held responsible for stereotyp...
In the late 19th Century, legal reasoning was dominated by formalistic analysis. Judges and lawyers...
Much work on legal knowledge systems treats legal reasoning as arguments that lead from a descriptio...
This paper focuses on the elements that influence judges throughout their decision-making process, n...
Legal theorists advance conflicting theories to explain judicial reasoning, for example, that judges...
Legal reasoning is part of the judicial process that revolves around what judges and courts do in de...
This article addresses the issue of the uniqueness of legal reasoning and, specifically, the author ...
Unlike research in linguistics and artificial intelligence, legal research has not used advances in ...
An essay of only five short paragraphs published several years ago by the noted Harvard paleontologi...
Abstract: In this dissertation, I propose a solution to Ronald Dworkin’s challenge from hard cases. ...
Scientists have long recognized two distinct forms of human thought. “Type 1” reasoning is unconscio...
The purpose of this Article is to describe a pluralistic model of reasoning that may be used to teac...
Stare decisis is a fundamental principle of case-based reasoning. Yet its application varies in comp...
In this essay, the author attempts to reveal the character and theoretical limits of judicial formal...
ON A JUDGE’S INTUITIVE DECISIONSSummaryThe paper discusses the credibility of legal decisions taken ...
Judicial intuition is misunderstood. Labeled as cognitive bias, it is held responsible for stereotyp...
In the late 19th Century, legal reasoning was dominated by formalistic analysis. Judges and lawyers...
Much work on legal knowledge systems treats legal reasoning as arguments that lead from a descriptio...
This paper focuses on the elements that influence judges throughout their decision-making process, n...
Legal theorists advance conflicting theories to explain judicial reasoning, for example, that judges...
Legal reasoning is part of the judicial process that revolves around what judges and courts do in de...
This article addresses the issue of the uniqueness of legal reasoning and, specifically, the author ...
Unlike research in linguistics and artificial intelligence, legal research has not used advances in ...
An essay of only five short paragraphs published several years ago by the noted Harvard paleontologi...
Abstract: In this dissertation, I propose a solution to Ronald Dworkin’s challenge from hard cases. ...
Scientists have long recognized two distinct forms of human thought. “Type 1” reasoning is unconscio...
The purpose of this Article is to describe a pluralistic model of reasoning that may be used to teac...
Stare decisis is a fundamental principle of case-based reasoning. Yet its application varies in comp...
In this essay, the author attempts to reveal the character and theoretical limits of judicial formal...