This paper discusses the functions of deductive justification in ideal reconstructions of judicial reasoning. It departs from the point of judicial reasoning: explaining and justifying the judicial decision. It argues that deductive validity is not enough for good judicial argument. On the other hand, deductive justification is necessary, not only for easy cases but for hard cases as well. It draws some consequences for the concept of 'jumps' in legal reasoning and for the traditional distinction between internal and external justification. © 1995 Kluwer Academic Publishers
none3siThis chapter is a light-weighted overview of significant contributions to legal logic insofar...
Legal reasoning is about the creation, application, and extinction of legal norms (rules, standards,...
none1noThis chapter provides a logical analysis of defeasible reasoning. First it introduces the not...
In this paper the thesis is argued that there is no need for a special legal logic to deal with the ...
Judicial reasoning is a kind of deductive and inductive reasoning. The deductive reasoning involves ...
During the nineteenth century, law was equated with science, and legal reasoning was thought to be a...
Demystifying Legal Reasoning defends the proposition that there are no special forms of reasoning p...
The paper consists of three parts. In the first part five kinds of defeasibility are distinguished t...
Philosophers of law generally appear to assume that there is a very close connection between a judic...
The present work will investigate in the most important aspects of the logic of the reasonable, in w...
In this short paper, I argue that legal philosophers ought to focus more than they have done so far ...
While defeasibility in legal reasoning has been the subject of recent scholarship, it has yet to be ...
This article demonstrates the inadequacy of legal deduction as a method that guarantees the certaint...
In this study, we will analyze how the dialectic provides methods that place the judge in a unique p...
In this paper we provide an overview of a number of fundamental reasoning formalisms in artificial i...
none3siThis chapter is a light-weighted overview of significant contributions to legal logic insofar...
Legal reasoning is about the creation, application, and extinction of legal norms (rules, standards,...
none1noThis chapter provides a logical analysis of defeasible reasoning. First it introduces the not...
In this paper the thesis is argued that there is no need for a special legal logic to deal with the ...
Judicial reasoning is a kind of deductive and inductive reasoning. The deductive reasoning involves ...
During the nineteenth century, law was equated with science, and legal reasoning was thought to be a...
Demystifying Legal Reasoning defends the proposition that there are no special forms of reasoning p...
The paper consists of three parts. In the first part five kinds of defeasibility are distinguished t...
Philosophers of law generally appear to assume that there is a very close connection between a judic...
The present work will investigate in the most important aspects of the logic of the reasonable, in w...
In this short paper, I argue that legal philosophers ought to focus more than they have done so far ...
While defeasibility in legal reasoning has been the subject of recent scholarship, it has yet to be ...
This article demonstrates the inadequacy of legal deduction as a method that guarantees the certaint...
In this study, we will analyze how the dialectic provides methods that place the judge in a unique p...
In this paper we provide an overview of a number of fundamental reasoning formalisms in artificial i...
none3siThis chapter is a light-weighted overview of significant contributions to legal logic insofar...
Legal reasoning is about the creation, application, and extinction of legal norms (rules, standards,...
none1noThis chapter provides a logical analysis of defeasible reasoning. First it introduces the not...