Analytic jurisprudence often strikes outsiders as a discipline unto itself, unconnected with the problems that other legal scholarship investigates. Gerald Postema, in the article to which this paper responds, traces this “unsociability” to two narrowing defects in the project of analytic jurisprudence: (1) from Austin on, it has concerned itself largely with the analysis of professional concepts, without connecting that analysis with other disciplines that study law, nor with the history of jurisprudence itself, nor with general philosophy; (2) analytic jurisprudence studies only time-‐slice legal systems, rather than legal systems unfolding in history. He argues that a time-‐slice legal system is incapable of explaining the normativity ...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
This modest manifesto — or minifesto — portrays legal history as a mode of critical analysis of law,...
In his provocative new book, A Realistic Theory of Law, Brian Tamanaha offers a variety of insightfu...
Analytic jurisprudence often strikes outsiders as a discipline unto itself, unconnected with the pro...
Anglo-American jurisprudence, before it insulated itself in conceptual analysis and defined itself i...
In Rethinking Legal Pragmatism: A Philosophical Approach, I take issue with the position of Judge ...
In contemporary jurisprudential writing, there is no lack of attention to method. Although I have pa...
International audienceFor people committed to a given course of action, the objectivity of social fa...
Among many of today’s legal historians, there is a relatively new and generally unreflective underst...
The central purpose of this essay is to show why the deconstruction of the traditional conception of...
While legal philosophy has its own unique set of questions and problems, one activity it shares with...
It is not obvious that philosophers and historians of law should take much interest in the scholarly...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
In bringing together this collection on law’s relationship with time, our concern has been to regis...
This article questions whether those outside law should take law seriously as an intellectual discip...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
This modest manifesto — or minifesto — portrays legal history as a mode of critical analysis of law,...
In his provocative new book, A Realistic Theory of Law, Brian Tamanaha offers a variety of insightfu...
Analytic jurisprudence often strikes outsiders as a discipline unto itself, unconnected with the pro...
Anglo-American jurisprudence, before it insulated itself in conceptual analysis and defined itself i...
In Rethinking Legal Pragmatism: A Philosophical Approach, I take issue with the position of Judge ...
In contemporary jurisprudential writing, there is no lack of attention to method. Although I have pa...
International audienceFor people committed to a given course of action, the objectivity of social fa...
Among many of today’s legal historians, there is a relatively new and generally unreflective underst...
The central purpose of this essay is to show why the deconstruction of the traditional conception of...
While legal philosophy has its own unique set of questions and problems, one activity it shares with...
It is not obvious that philosophers and historians of law should take much interest in the scholarly...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
In bringing together this collection on law’s relationship with time, our concern has been to regis...
This article questions whether those outside law should take law seriously as an intellectual discip...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
This modest manifesto — or minifesto — portrays legal history as a mode of critical analysis of law,...
In his provocative new book, A Realistic Theory of Law, Brian Tamanaha offers a variety of insightfu...