•  162
    Dimensions of Normativity: New Essays on Metaethics and Jurisprudence (edited book)
    with Plunkett David and Shapiro Scott
    Oxford University Press. 2019.
    Understood one way, the branch of contemporary philosophical ethics that goes by the label "metaethics" concerns certain second-order questions about ethics-questions not in ethics, but rather ones about our thought and talk about ethics, and how the ethical facts (insofar as there are any) fit into reality. Analogously, the branch of contemporary philosophy of law that is often called "general jurisprudence" deals with certain second order questions about law- questions not in the law, but rath…Read more
  •  209
    Raz on Detachment, Acceptance and Describability
    Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 27 (3): 403-427. 2007.
    According to H.L.A. Hart's analysis, to utter an internal legal statement is partly to express an acceptance of a set of norms. This article attempts to defend Hart's conception of internal legal discourse by responding to the following three lines of criticism that can be found in Joseph Raz's writings: (i) that Hart's analysis fails to account for what Raz calls ‘detached legal statements’; (ii) that Hart's deployment of the notion of acceptance in his analysis vitiates his legal positivist pr…Read more
  •  935
    According to philosophical orthodoxy, the parties to moral or legal disputes genuinely disagree only if their uses of key normative terms in the dispute express the same meaning. Recently, however, this orthodoxy has been challenged. According to an influential alternative view, genuine moral and legal disagreements should be understood as metalinguistic negotiations over which meaning a given term should have. In this paper, we argue that the shared meaning view is motivated by much deeper cons…Read more
  • Legal Judgments as Plural Acceptance of Norms
    In Leslie Green & Brian Leiter (eds.), Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Law: Volume 1, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 107-137. 2011.
    This chapter proposes an expressivist analysis of internal legal statements that portrays speakers of such statements as aiming at initiation or maintenance of a certain form of coordination with their audiences. Some have argued that expressivist analyses fail to distinguish clearly normative statements from attempts to goad or prod the audience in various nonrational ways. This chapter's analysis enables us to make this distinction clearly, at least for internal legal statements, and also ther…Read more
  •  185
    According to a widely held view, people's commitments to laws are dependent on the existence in their community of a conventional practice of complying with certain fundamental laws. This conventionalism has significantly hampered our attempts to explain the normative practice of law. Ronald Dworkin has argued against conventionalism by bringing up the phenomenon of persistent fundamental legal controversies, but neither Dworkin nor his legal positivist respondents have correctly understood the …Read more
  •  139
    Jurisprudential Theories and First‐Order Legal Judgments
    Philosophy Compass 8 (5): 457-471. 2013.
    The nature of the relation between jurisprudential theories and first-order legal judgments is a strangely uncontroversial matter in contemporary legal philosophy. There is one dominant conception of the relation according to which jurisprudential theories are second-order or meta-legal theories that specify the ultimate grounds of first-order legal judgments. According to this conception, difficult first-order legal disputes are to be resolved by jurisprudential theorizing. According to an alte…Read more
  •  1104
    What does it take for lawyers and others to think or talk about the same legal topic—e.g., defamation, culpability? We argue that people are able to think or talk about the same topic not when they possess a matching substantive understanding of the topic, as traditional metasemantics says, but instead when their thoughts or utterances are related to each other in certain ways. And what determines the content of thoughts and utterances is what would best serve the core purposes of the representa…Read more
  • Legal positivism and metaethics
    In Torben Spaak (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Legal Positivism, Cambridge University Press. 2021.
  •  56
    Kevin Toh
    Problema. Anuario de Filosofía y Teoria Del Derecho 1 (11). 2017.
  •  161
    Hart's Expressivism and His Benthamite Project
    Legal Theory 11 (2): 75-123. 2005.
    In a 1973 article, H.L.A. Hart says the following about Jeremy Bentham's achievements in the philosophy of law: Bentham was certainly not the first to define law as a command: Hobbes, for example, had anticipated him in that, and even the despised Blackstone's definition of municipal law was in terms of command. But Bentham differed from Hobbes and, as far as I know, from all previous social theorists in insisting that we must not so define our terms in legal or political theory as to make the p…Read more
  •  53
    Erratum to: Four Neglected Prescriptions of Hartian Legal Philosophy
    Law and Philosophy 34 (3): 333-368. 2015.
    This paper seeks to uncover and rationally reconstruct four theoretical prescriptions that H. L. A. Hart urged philosophers to observe and follow when investigating and theorizing about the nature of law. The four prescriptions may appear meager and insignificant when each is seen in isolation, but together as an inter-connected set they have substantial implications. In effect, they constitute a central part of Hart’s campaign to put philosophical investigations about the nature of law onto a p…Read more
  •  4
    Legal judgments as plural acceptance of norms
    In Leslie Green & Brian Leiter (eds.), Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Law, Oxford University Press. 2011.
  •  59
    Four Neglected Prescriptions of Hartian Legal Philosophy
    Law and Philosophy 33 (6): 689-724. 2014.
    This paper seeks to uncover and rationally reconstruct four theoretical prescriptions that H. L. A. Hart urged philosophers to observe and follow when investigating and theorizing about the nature of law. The four prescriptions may appear meager and insignificant when each is seen in isolation, but together as an inter-connected set they have substantial implications. In effect, they constitute a central part of Hart's campaign to put philosophical investigations about the nature of law onto a p…Read more