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50Is There a Right of Freedom of Expression? - by Larry Alexander (review)Philosophical Books 48 (3): 285-286. 2007.
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347H. L. A. Hart and the "open texture" of languageLaw and Philosophy 10 (1): 51-72. 1991.H. L. A. Hart and the "Open Texture" of Language tries to clarify the writings of both Hart and Friedrich Waismann on "open texture". In Waismann's work, "open texture" referred to the potential vagueness of words under extreme (hypothetical) circumstances. Hart's use of the term was quite different, and his work has been misunderstood because those differences were underestimated. Hart should not be read as basing his argument for judicial discretion on the nature of language; primarily, he was…Read more
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122Legal philosophy in AmericaIn Cheryl Misak (ed.), The Oxford handbook of American philosophy, Oxford University Press. 2008.This article, written for the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of American Philosophy, offers an overview of the most important American contributions to legal philosophy - American legal realism, law and economics, various critical schools of jurisprudence, Lon Fuller, and Ronald Dworkin - while speculating on what might be distinctive of American legal philosophy. One obvious recurring theme is a focus on practical application in general, and adjudication (especially constitutional adjudication) in…Read more
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96Alf Ross on the Nature of LawRatio Juris 36 (1): 61-71. 2023.In his work, On Law and Justice, Alf Ross sought to explain law in scientific/empirical terms, in terms that would require no recourse to what he called “metaphysics” or “idealism.” The result is a sort of translation of legal rules and official actions into propositions of behavior, predictions of behavior, and shared ideology. The present work raises questions about the tensions within Ross's work(s), and discusses the places where Ross's analysis seems to fall short of its ambitions. In the c…Read more
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35The Nature of Law and Reasons for ActionProblema. Anuario de Filosofía y Teoria Del Derecho 1 (5): 399-415. 2011.If a legal rule tells us to do something, do we thereby have a reason to do it? This remains one of the most basic questions for theoretical and practical reflection on law. It is a foundational question, which many prominent contemporary theorists have discussed, yet the topic remains poorly understood. While many legal positivists have recently sought to “explain normativity”, this is likely a project inconsistent with the basic commitments of legal positivism, and, in any event, thoroughly un…Read more
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32Some Reflections on Contract Law TheoryProblema. Anuario de Filosofía y Teoria Del Derecho 1 (1): 143-201. 2007.The existing divergence between how we talk about contract law and actual contract experience, the parties moral obligation to keep contracts and the government’s role in regulating contracts, are the three main issues addressed in this article. The analysis of this article points to a narrower and more cautious approach to contract law, not towards a general theory, but one focused on the rules of a single time and place.Resumen:La divergencia que existe entre la forma en que hablamos del derec…Read more
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52Law and Reasons: Comments on Rodriguez-BlancoProblema. Anuario de Filosofía y Teoria Del Derecho 1 (7): 27-39. 2013.In Veronica Rodriguez-Blanco’s thoughtful and important article, “Reasons in Action v Triggering Reasons: A Reply to Enoch on Reason-Giving and Le- gal Normativity,” she explores with great care the nature of reason-giving, in connection with challenging David Enoch’s influential recent work on reason-giving and the law. While Rodriguez-Blanco’s article makes an important contribution to the literature on the best understanding of rea- son-giving and practical reasoning, it is not clear that an …Read more
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3Joseph Raz's approach to legal positivismIn Torben Spaak (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Legal Positivism, Cambridge University Press. 2021.
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The normativity of lawIn Torben Spaak (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Legal Positivism, Cambridge University Press. 2021.
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123Legal interpretation and truthJurisprudence 13 (1): 107-112. 2022.Pierluigi Chiassoni’s wonderful book, Interpretation without Truth,1 is an important and welcome addition to the ongoing conversations about interpretation, legal realism, and legal truth. Chiasson...
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1828Kelsen, Hart, and Legal NormativityRevus. Journal for Constitutional Theory and Philosophy of Law / Revija Za Ustavno Teorijo in Filozofijo Prava 34 25-42. 2018.This article focuses on issues relating to legal normativity, emphasizing the way these matters have been elaborated in the works of Kelsen and Hart and later commentators on their theories. First, in Section 2, the author offers a view regarding the nature of law and legal normativity focusing on Kelsen's work (at least one reasonable reading of it). The argument is that the Basic Norm is presupposed when a citizen chooses to read the actions of legal officials in a normative way. In this Kelse…Read more
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917On the Nature of Legal Normativity, 37 Revus 83-91 (2019)Revus. Journal for Constitutional Theory and Philosophy of Law / Revija Za Ustavno Teorijo in Filozofijo Prava 37 83-91. 2019.In this response to eight commentaries on my article “Kelsen, Hart, and legal normativity” I clarify some points in my original analysis and agree with some comments regarding work that still needs to be done. In particular, I attempt to distinguish my position from both Berkeleyan idealism and mere subjective perception. I agree with the commentators who urge that more must be done to analyze the nature of normativity in general, and legal normativity in particular.
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89A Critique of Alexy’s Claim to CorrectnessRatio Juris 33 (2): 124-133. 2020.This article offers an overview of the difficulties in Robert Alexy’s idea of law’s “claim to correctness.” The inquiry takes us deep into the nature of simple communication, back out to what it means to have a theory about the nature of law, and also in the direction of wondering about the interaction of legal theory and practical reasoning—reasoning about how we should best act. The article offers reasons to question whether law in fact makes claims, at least in any straightforward sense. Even…Read more
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53Human Rights Through the Legislature: Grégoire Webber, Paul Yowell, Richard Ekins, Maris Köpcke, Bradley W. Miller and Francisco J. Urbina, Legislated Rights: Securing Human Rights through Legislation. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press, 2018, pp. 209. $110.00 (review)Law and Philosophy 38 (2): 221-225. 2019.This is a book review of Grégoire Webber, Paul Yowell, Richard Ekins, Maris Köpcke, Bradley W. Miller, and Francisco J. Urbina, "Legislated Rights" (Cambridge U. Pr., 2018)
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30Kelsen in the United States: Still MisunderstoodIn D. A. Jeremy Telman (ed.), Hans Kelsen in America - Selective Affinities and the Mysteries of Academic Influence, Springer Verlag. pp. 17-29. 2016.In American legal philosophy—even if one narrows one’s focus to careful consideration of the sub-category, American analytical legal philosophy—the ideas of Hans Kelsen are generally ignored. And on the rare occasions when Kelsen’s ideas are not ignored, they are almost always discussed quickly, and, more often than not, erroneously. Part I of this paper gives examples of Kelsen’s works being overlooked, sample misreadings by prominent theorists, and considers some standard explanations for this…Read more
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103Shapiro, Scott J. Legality. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011. Pp. 472. $39.95Ethics 122 (2): 444-448. 2012.
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123Book ReviewsPeter Cane,. Responsibility in Law and Morality.Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2002. Pp. xii+303. £28.00 ; £18.95 (review)Ethics 117 (1): 124-127. 2006.
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78The Promise and Problems of Universal, General Theories of Contract LawRatio Juris 30 (4): 391-402. 2017.There are a growing number of general theories of contract law and of other doctrinal areas. These theories are vastly ambitious in their aims. This article explores the nature of these claims, and the motivations for offering such theories, while considering the challenges to success. It is in the nature of theorizing to seek general categories, including doctrinal categories, and to try to discover insights that hold across those categories. However, differences both within a doctrinal area an…Read more
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274Radbruch's Formula and Conceptual AnalysisAmerican Journal of Jurisprudence 56 (1): 45-57. 2011.
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271Legal positivism and 'explaining' normativity and authorityAmerican Philosophical Association Newsletter 5 (2 (Spring 2006)): 5-9. 2006.It has become increasingly common for legal positivist theorists to claim that the primary objective of legal theory in general, and legal positivism in particular, is "explaining normativity." The phrase "explaining normativity" can be understood either ambitiously or more modestly. The more modest meaning is an analytical exploration of what is meant by legal or moral obligation, or by the authority claims of legal officials. When the term is understood ambitiously - as meaning an explanation …Read more
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155Contract Rights and Remedies, and the Divergence between Law and MoralityRatio Juris 21 (2): 194-211. 2008.There is an ongoing debate in the philosophical and jurisprudential literature regarding the nature and possibility of Contract theory. On one hand are those who argue (or assume) that there is, or should be, a single, general, universal theory of Contract Law, one applicable to all jurisdictions and all times. On the other hand are those who assert that Contract theory should be localized to particular times and places, perhaps even with different theories for different types of agreements. Thi…Read more
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113Analyzing law: new essays in legal theory (edited book)Oxford University Press. 1998.Analyzing Law offers an important selection of the most influential and challenging work now being done in legal theory. A central focus of the essays in this work is the contribution of the well-known philosopher Jules Coleman to the various topics which are covered by the contributors.
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30Teoría del Derecho: tipos y propósitosIsonomía. Revista de Teoría y Filosofía Del Derecho 25 57-68. 2006.
Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Law |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Normative Ethics |