Edited by Jordi Ferrer
Beltrán and Giovanni Battista Ratti
When a legal rule requires us to drive on the right,
notarize our wills, or refrain from selling bootleg liquor, how are we to
describe and understand that requirement? In particular, how does the logical
form of such a requirement relate to the logical form of other requirements,
such as moral requirements, or the requirements of logic itself? When a general
legal rule is applied or distinguished in a particular case, how can we
describe that process in logical form? Such questions have come to preoccupy
modern legal philosophy as its methodology, drawing on the philosophy of logic,
becomes ever more sophisticated.
This collection gathers together some of the most
prominent legal philosophers in the Anglo-American and civil law traditions to
analyse the logical structure of legal norms. They focus on the issue of
defeasibility, which has become a central concern for both logicians and legal
philosophers in recent years.
The book is divided into four parts. The first section
is devoted to unravelling the basic concepts related to legal defeasibility and
the logical structure of legal norms, focusing on the idea that law, or its
components, are liable to implicit exceptions, which cannot be specified before
the law's application to particular cases. Part two aims to disentangle the
main relations between the issue of legal defeasibility and the issue of legal
interpretation, exploring the topic of defeasibility as a product of certain
argumentative techniques in the law. Section 3 of the volume is dedicated to
one of the most problematic issues in the history of jurisprudence: the
connections between law and morality. Finally, section 4 of the volume is
devoted to analysing the relationships between defeasibility and legal
adjudication.