•  90
    Law and Language: How Words Mislead Us
    Jurisprudence 1 (1): 25-38. 2010.
    Our world is full of fictional devices that let people feel better about their situation - through deception and self-deception. The legal realist, Felix Cohen, argued that law and legal reasoning is full of similarly dubious labels and bad reasoning, though of a special kind. He argued that judges, lawyers and legal commentators allow linguistic inventions and conventions to distort their thinking. Like the ancient peoples who built idols out of stone and wood and then asked them for assistance…Read more
  •  29
    Global Error and Legal Truth
    Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 29 (3): 535-547. 2009.
    One standard criterion for there being objectivity in an area of discourse is that there is conceptual space between what someone thinks to be the case and what actually is the case. That is, participants can be mistaken. This article explores one aspect of the objectivity debate as regards law: does it make sense to say that all legal officials or practitioners in a jurisdiction are mistaken (over a significant period of time) about some legal proposition? The possibility of legal error is impo…Read more
  •  5
    The Idea of Private Law (review)
    Philosophical Books 37 (2): 131-132. 1996.
  •  83
    Contracts
    In Franklin G. Miller & Alan Wertheimer (eds.), The Ethics of Consent: Theory and Practice, Oxford University Press. 2010.
    Consent, in terms of voluntary choice, is - or, at least, appears to be or purports to be - at the essence of contract law. Contract law, both in principle and in practice, is about allowing parties to enter arrangements on terms they choose - each party imposing obligations on itself in return for obligations another party has placed upon itself. This freedom of contract- an ideal by which there are obligations to the extent, but only to the extent, freely chosen by the parties - is contrasted …Read more
  • Reductionism and explanation in legal theory
    In James W. Harris, Timothy Andrew Orville Endicott, Joshua Getzler & Edwin Peel (eds.), Properties of Law: Essays in Honour of Jim Harris, Oxford University Press. 2006.
  •  220
    Legal positivism and 'explaining' normativity and authority
    American 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
  •  4
    JE Penner, The Idea of Property in Law (review)
    Philosophy in Review 18 (2): 143-145. 1998.
  •  97
    A number of important legal theorists have recently argued for metaphysically realist approaches to legal determinacy grounded in particular semantic theories or theories of reference, in particular, views of meaning and reference based on the works of Putnam and Kripke. The basic position of these theorists is that questions of legal interpretation and legal determinacy should be approached through semantic meaning. However, the role of authority (in the form of lawmaker choice) in law in gener…Read more
  •  14
    Review of Howard Schweber, The Language of Liberal Constitutionalism (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (3). 2008.
  • ADDIS, M.-Wittgenstein (review)
    Philosophical Books 41 (4): 267-268. 2000.
  •  60
    Philosophy of law (edited book)
    Routledge. 2006.
    The first two volumes of the collection are devoted primarily to analytical legal theory--in particular, theories about the nature of law. This is the idea of legal philosophy most familiar to jurisprudential students in the English-speaking world, and many of the civil-law countries. The last two volumes sample schools and theorists who mostly come from outside the analytical tradition, and who are, in one sense or another, critical theorists--theorists more interested in offering systematic cr…Read more
  •  39
    John Austin
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.