Legal Argumentation: Reasoned Dissensus and Common Ground
Boom juridisch (Publisher)
Published on 16. April 2024
Book
Paperback/Softback
190 pages
978-94-6212-921-4 (ISBN)
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Description
In legal argumentation, dissensus is the point of departure, consensus the endpoint. However, the relationship between dissensus and consensus in argumentation is more complex than it looks at first sight. First, a fruitful debate presupposes not only a difference of opinion, but also commonalities of meaning and corresponding rationality criteria, that is, consensus or common ground. Second, legal argumentation does not always result in consensus. It also explicates and refines differences of opinion about the means of proof, methods of interpretation, or the values that should prevail. It follows that in legal discourse, dissensus and consensus are not only opposites, but also interconnected in a complex way.
Legal Argumentation: Reasoned Dissensus and Common Ground includes contributions from law, argumentation theory, logic and philosophical perspectives, discussing the intriguing interconnection between dissensus and consensus in legal argumentation. The insights may be of interest not only to experts in Legal Methodology, Argumentation Theory and Legal Evidence, but to judges, lawyers and law students as well.
Legal Argumentation: Reasoned Dissensus and Common Ground includes contributions from law, argumentation theory, logic and philosophical perspectives, discussing the intriguing interconnection between dissensus and consensus in legal argumentation. The insights may be of interest not only to experts in Legal Methodology, Argumentation Theory and Legal Evidence, but to judges, lawyers and law students as well.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
The Hague
Netherlands
Publishing group
eleven
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 165 mm
ISBN-13
978-94-6212-921-4 (9789462129214)
Schweitzer Classification
Content
1 Does virtue deepen disagreement in law?; 2 Legal interpretation and the risk account of scientific objectivity; 3 What to do when experts disagree on judicial
fact-finding?; 4 The use of literary references in the justification of separate opinions; 5 An introduction to the economic analysis of law as a legal theory in improving legal argumentation and judicial decision-making for IP law in Europe; 6 Contextual contingency of social rules; 7 Defeasibility: a contextualist view; 8 Consensus in concepts? A brief exploration; 9 Fallacies concerning linguistic argumentation in law; 10 Probability clerks and probability judges. Or how to prevent probabilistic fallacies in court; 11 The virtue of being disagreeable. Identifying disagreement about legal evidence; 12 Robust evidential probability and reasonable doubt; 13 The pragmatics of evidence discourse: arguments from ostension; 14 The Rule of Law and its procedural
implications; 15 Forensic rhetoric and conflict resolution. Enforcing agreements through emotion
fact-finding?; 4 The use of literary references in the justification of separate opinions; 5 An introduction to the economic analysis of law as a legal theory in improving legal argumentation and judicial decision-making for IP law in Europe; 6 Contextual contingency of social rules; 7 Defeasibility: a contextualist view; 8 Consensus in concepts? A brief exploration; 9 Fallacies concerning linguistic argumentation in law; 10 Probability clerks and probability judges. Or how to prevent probabilistic fallacies in court; 11 The virtue of being disagreeable. Identifying disagreement about legal evidence; 12 Robust evidential probability and reasonable doubt; 13 The pragmatics of evidence discourse: arguments from ostension; 14 The Rule of Law and its procedural
implications; 15 Forensic rhetoric and conflict resolution. Enforcing agreements through emotion