The increasingly cosmopolitan nature of the nation-state, plus an increasing scepticism toward the modernism that has informed the scientific-legal nexus of late-capitalist society, creates the conditions within which a "multicultural" conception of law might emerge. This thesis evaluates the extent to which the field of legal pluralism can contribute to the development of such a conception. To facilitate this, I distinguish between three epistemological perspectives through which legal pluralists approach the study of law: post-realism, post-modernism, and post-pragmatism. In order to identify the conceptual resources that they might contribute I interrogate each with three questions: what definition of law does each imply?; what conceptio...