9780674708761-0674708768-The Problems of Jurisprudence

The Problems of Jurisprudence

ISBN-13: 9780674708761
ISBN-10: 0674708768
Edition: Revised
Author: Richard A. Posner
Publication date: 1993
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Format: Paperback 512 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780674708761
ISBN-10: 0674708768
Edition: Revised
Author: Richard A. Posner
Publication date: 1993
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Format: Paperback 512 pages

Summary

The Problems of Jurisprudence (ISBN-13: 9780674708761 and ISBN-10: 0674708768), written by authors Richard A. Posner, was published by Harvard University Press in 1993. With an overall rating of 4.1 stars, it's a notable title among other Law Enforcement (Criminal Law, Reference, Law Practice, Jurisprudence, Legal Theory & Systems, Social Sciences) books. You can easily purchase or rent The Problems of Jurisprudence (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Law Enforcement books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.33.

Description

In this book, one of our country’s most distinguished scholar-judges shares with us his vision of the law. For the past two thousand years, the philosophy of law has been dominated by two rival doctrines. One contends that law is more than politics and yields, in the hands of skillful judges, correct answers to even the most difficult legal questions; the other contends that law is politics through and through and that judges wield essentially arbitrary powers. Rejecting these doctrines as too metaphysical in the first instance and too nihilistic in the second, Richard Posner argues for a pragmatic jurisprudence, one that eschews formalism in favor of the factual and the empirical. Laws, he argues, are not abstract, sacred entities, but socially determined goads for shaping behavior to conform with society’s values.

Examining how judges go about making difficult decisions, Posner argues that they cannot rely on either logic or science, but must fall back on a grab bag of informal methods of reasoning that owe less than one might think to legal training and experience. Indeed, he reminds us, the greatest figures in American law have transcended the traditional conceptions of the lawyer’s craft. Robert Jackson did not attend law school and Benjamin Cardozo left before getting a degree. Holmes was neither the most successful of lawyers nor the most lawyerly of judges. Citing these examples, Posner makes a plea for a law that frees itself from excessive insularity and takes all knowledge, practical and theoretical, as grist for its mill.

The pragmatism that Posner espouses implies looking at problems concretely, experimentally, without illusions, with an emphasis on keeping diverse paths of inquiry open, and, above all, with the insistence that social thought and action be evaluated as instruments to desired human goals rather than as ends in themselves. In making his arguments, he discusses notable figures in jurisprudence from Antigone to Ronald Dworkin as well as recent movements ranging from law and economics to civic republicanism, and feminism to libertarianism. All are subjected to Posner’s stringent analysis in a fresh and candid examination of some of the deepest problems presented by the enterprise of law.

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