Evaluative and explanatory reasoning
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Bibliographic Information
Evaluative and explanatory reasoning
Quorum Books, 1992
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [205]-208) and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume is a culmination of years of development, and the first to introduce the concepts of superoptimum evaluative and explanatory reasoning. Stuart Nagel's new Quorum book will help academic and practicing attorneys in two important ways. First, by understanding evaluative reasoning, they will gain a better grasp of the appropriate behavior to be adopted if they wish to achieve certain desired goals. Second, by understanding the elements of explanatory reasoning, they will understand how and why decisions are reached.
Evaluative reasoning can take several forms. It can help decision-makers select from among several public policy choices. It can enhance individual decision-making and provide means to allocate scarce resources. It can also assist in advocating and influencing decisions, mediating disputes, representing divergent viewpoints, and in assigning people to specific tasks. Explanatory reasoning, on the other hand, will help explain public policy making, and assist users in generalizing from cases and facts, and in understanding relationships. The purpose of explanatory reasoning is also to explain why superoptimum solutions are infrequently adopted and why they are seldom successfully implemented. The use of both kinds of reasoning, says Nagel, are particularly important to those who want a better understanding and want to improve the legal system.
Table of Contents
Introduction Evaluative or Prescriptive Reasoning Choosing Among Public Policies Individual Decision-Making Allocating Scarce Resources Advocating and Influencing Decisions Mediating Disputes Being a Representative Assigning People to Tasks Optimum Sequencing SOS Evaluation Explanatory or Predictive Reasoning Explaining Public Policy Making Explaining Individual Decision-Making Generalizing from Cases Generalizing from Facts Relational Reasoning SOS Causation
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