Legal realism regained : saving realism from critical acclaim
著者
書誌事項
Legal realism regained : saving realism from critical acclaim
(Jurists : profiles in legal theory)
Stanford Law Books, 2008
- : cloth
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [231]-244) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Legal Realism Regained presents a comparison between the legal realists, a group of pragmatic legal theorists from the 1920s and 1930s, and critical legal studies, a movement of postmodern legal theory during the end of the twentieth century. The book argues for a return to legal realism and the classical pragmatism of John Dewey and William James and for a rejection of the postmodern critique of critical legal studies. It discusses the two movements with respect to three topics: their view of history, their view of social science, and their view of language.
Rejecting the claim that critical legal studies can be seen as the heir of legal realism, Legal Realism Regained argues that, with respect to each of these three topics, the realists still present a stronger argument than their more radical descendants.
目次
Contents Preface 1. Tale of Two Movements A Twice Told Tale The Realism of Legal Realism Langdellian Orthodoxy The Realist Critique The Legacy of Legal Realism The Critical Legal Studies Movement: Realism meets Radicalism The Problem Historicism Social Science Language Method E Pluribus Unum 2. The Seeds of Time: Legal Realism and Legal History In the Footsteps of Oliver Wendell Holmes The Evolution of Evolutionary Theory: From Social Darwinism to Scientific Naturalism Oliver Wendell Holmes v. Herbert Spencer Scientific Naturalism Realist Legal History Conclusion 3. The Wealth of Historicism: Legal History in the Critical Mold Clio Unleashed The Problem with Functionalism and Adaptationism Conclusion 4. You Keep Samin= when You Ought to Be Changin=: The Realist Turn to Social Science The Llewellyn-Pound Exchange Realism in the Age of Relativity Functionalism Predictivism Instrumentalism The UCC Conclusion 5. Oh, the Tangled Webs We Weave: The CLS Critique of Social Science Social Science as Politics Critique of Science and Reason The Poverty of Functionalism Conclusion 6. Night of the Living Dead: Legal Realist Anti-Conceptualism Meaning as Reference Meaning in a Functionalist Framework Legal Realism and Language Conclusion 7. The World Well Lost: Variations on the Linguistic Theme A Portrait of Wittgenstein as a Radical Philosopher CLS and Post-Structuralism The Fragmentation of CLS Conclusion 8. These Boots Were Made For Walking: The Continued Relevance of Legal Realism The Revival of Pragmatism Pragmatism and History Pragmatism and Social Science Value-Free or Purposive Social Science Behaviorism v. Interpretivism Pragmatism and Language Paradigms Incommensurability Interpretation Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index
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