Two hundred years elapsed before the nineteenth century logicians Boole, DeMorgan, and others, finally succeeded in formally developing the calculus of reasoning first suggested by the German mathematician, Leibniz.3 It is, perhaps, to the credit of the legal profession that less than one century has subsequently elapsed, and already some lawyers and legal writers, along with other scholars, are beginning to explore the relationship between modern logic and law. What is attempted here is to outline the bare bones of one tentative way of looking at the relationship between modern logic and the judicial decision process. From the useful vantage point of a Lasswellian social process framework of analysis, logic and judicial decision making a...
In this study, we will analyze how the dialectic provides methods that place the judge in a unique p...
Demystifying Legal Reasoning defends the proposition that there are no special forms of reasoning p...
Such creative statutory construction is familiar to anyone who reads appellate decisions. Whatever...
Two hundred years elapsed before the nineteenth century logicians Boole, De Morgan, and others, fin...
Two hundred years elapsed before the nineteenth century logicians Boole, DeMorgan, and others, final...
The object of study of this thesis is provided insight into the legal interdimensionality of the con...
In contemporary legal philosophy there has been a notable shift in interest away from a concern with...
During the nineteenth century, law was equated with science, and legal reasoning was thought to be a...
This paper examines legal reasoning from a process point of view; that is, it seeks to demonstrate h...
The legal decision in a concrete case is never completely given in advance in the statute. A theory ...
For more than a century, lawyers have written about legal reasoning, and the flow of books and artic...
In the late 19th Century, legal reasoning was dominated by formalistic analysis. Judges and lawyers...
This essay examines judicial decision-making from the perspective of Whiteheadian 'process philosoph...
The traditional theories of judicial decision-making have their differences set around the importanc...
The central theme of this article is that modern notions of logic, deriving from computer logics and...
In this study, we will analyze how the dialectic provides methods that place the judge in a unique p...
Demystifying Legal Reasoning defends the proposition that there are no special forms of reasoning p...
Such creative statutory construction is familiar to anyone who reads appellate decisions. Whatever...
Two hundred years elapsed before the nineteenth century logicians Boole, De Morgan, and others, fin...
Two hundred years elapsed before the nineteenth century logicians Boole, DeMorgan, and others, final...
The object of study of this thesis is provided insight into the legal interdimensionality of the con...
In contemporary legal philosophy there has been a notable shift in interest away from a concern with...
During the nineteenth century, law was equated with science, and legal reasoning was thought to be a...
This paper examines legal reasoning from a process point of view; that is, it seeks to demonstrate h...
The legal decision in a concrete case is never completely given in advance in the statute. A theory ...
For more than a century, lawyers have written about legal reasoning, and the flow of books and artic...
In the late 19th Century, legal reasoning was dominated by formalistic analysis. Judges and lawyers...
This essay examines judicial decision-making from the perspective of Whiteheadian 'process philosoph...
The traditional theories of judicial decision-making have their differences set around the importanc...
The central theme of this article is that modern notions of logic, deriving from computer logics and...
In this study, we will analyze how the dialectic provides methods that place the judge in a unique p...
Demystifying Legal Reasoning defends the proposition that there are no special forms of reasoning p...
Such creative statutory construction is familiar to anyone who reads appellate decisions. Whatever...