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Full-Text Articles in Law
Money As Measure, David G. Carlson
Welfare As Happiness, John Bronsteen, Christopher Buccafusco, Jonathan Masur
Welfare As Happiness, John Bronsteen, Christopher Buccafusco, Jonathan Masur
Articles
Perhaps the most important goal of law and policy is improving people’s lives. But what constitutes improvement? What is quality of life, and how can it be measured? In previous articles, we have used insights from the new field of hedonic psychology to analyze central questions in civil and criminal justice, and we now apply those insights to a broader inquiry: how can the law make life better? The leading accounts of human welfare in law, economics, and philosophy are preference-satisfaction - getting what one wants - and objective list approaches - possessing an enumerated set of capabilities. This Article …
Preface (On Alain Badiou’S Handwriting), Peter Goodrich
Preface (On Alain Badiou’S Handwriting), Peter Goodrich
Articles
No abstract provided.
The Questioning Attitude: Questions About Derrida, Martin Stone
The Questioning Attitude: Questions About Derrida, Martin Stone
Articles
No abstract provided.
J.D., Peter Goodrich
A Fragment On Cnutism With Brief Divagations On The Philosophy Of The Near Miss, Peter Goodrich
A Fragment On Cnutism With Brief Divagations On The Philosophy Of The Near Miss, Peter Goodrich
Articles
This fragment is taken, mid-sentence as it were, from a longer discourse. It is plucked in process from a discussion of friendship for ideas. It is part of a longer journey through the annals of amity. The fragment also examines a fragment, a gloss on a text, a marginal comment, a handwritten note, which is taken to constitute the modern origin of Cnutism.
The Antepenultimacy Of The Beginning In Hegel’S Science Of Logic, David G. Carlson
The Antepenultimacy Of The Beginning In Hegel’S Science Of Logic, David G. Carlson
Articles
The Science of Logic is the keystone for Hegel's philosophy. Perhaps the single most perplexing problem in this work is the status of the beginning. Hegel insisted that philosophy must be self-grounding. It cannot start from "givens." Yet, if Hegel's beginning is merely stipulated or "given," then his project is defeated. The usual view of Hegel's intent is that the beginning (Pure Being) is the last step, so that what begins as a presupposition ends up being "proven." This article suggests something different. It proposes that the beginning (Pure Being) is actually the "antepenultimate" (or third-from-last) step of the Science …
Why Are There Four Hegelian Judgments, David G. Carlson
Why Are There Four Hegelian Judgments, David G. Carlson
Articles
Hegel is the philosopher of threes. His entire system is triune: logic-nature-spirit. Within the logic is a triune structure: being, essence, notion. Within notion there is a triad: subject-object-idea. Within subjectivity, there is a triad: notion, judgment, syllogism. Yet when we examine Hegel's critique of judgment, there are four (not three): inherence-reflection-necessity-notion.
This paper tries to explain why this is so. There is a disturbing element present at all times in Hegel's logic - what Slavoj Zizek named a silent fourth, which erupts and manifests itself in judgment. This paper refines and justifies Zizek's insight, arguing from the text of …
Spinoza's Identity And Philosophy: Jewish Or Otherwise?, Suzanne Last Stone
Spinoza's Identity And Philosophy: Jewish Or Otherwise?, Suzanne Last Stone
Articles
No abstract provided.
Nietzsche And Aretaic Legal Theory, Kyron Huigens
Nietzsche And The Nazis: The Impact Of National Socialism On The Philosophy Of Nietzsche, Charles M. Yablon
Nietzsche And The Nazis: The Impact Of National Socialism On The Philosophy Of Nietzsche, Charles M. Yablon
Articles
No abstract provided.
Spinoza's Dialectic And The Paradoxes Of Tolerance: A Foundation For Pluralism, Michel Rosenfeld
Spinoza's Dialectic And The Paradoxes Of Tolerance: A Foundation For Pluralism, Michel Rosenfeld
Articles
Tolerance and pluralism seem to draw on the same criterion of legitimacy. The liberal case for tolerance, however, leads to a series of paradoxes, including Popper's paradox of tolerance according to which tolerating theintolerant is self-defeating. Spinoza's defense of tolerance as it emergesfrom his Theological-Political Treatise and his Ethics is more pervasive and much more encompasssing than the liberal justification. Spinoza justifies tolerance as a private and public virtue as well as on prudential grounds. Although Spinoza's conception of tolerance appears in significant respects paradoxical and contradictory - e.g., it is puzzling why Spinoza, the philosopher of reason, should avocate …
Was Spinoza A Jewish Philosopher, J. David Bleich
The Appearance Of Right And The Essence Of Wrong: Metaphor And Metonymy In Law, Jeanne L. Schroeder, David G. Carlson
The Appearance Of Right And The Essence Of Wrong: Metaphor And Metonymy In Law, Jeanne L. Schroeder, David G. Carlson
Articles
No abstract provided.
Paul, Pomo, And The Legitimacy Of Choice Post 9/11: A Brief Comment On Three Papers, Richard H. Weisberg
Paul, Pomo, And The Legitimacy Of Choice Post 9/11: A Brief Comment On Three Papers, Richard H. Weisberg
Articles
No abstract provided.
Can Lawyers Be Cured?: Eternal Recurrence And The Lacanian Death Drive, Jeanne L. Schroeder
Can Lawyers Be Cured?: Eternal Recurrence And The Lacanian Death Drive, Jeanne L. Schroeder
Articles
No abstract provided.
Hegel’S Theory Of Quality, David G. Carlson
Hegel’S Theory Of Quality, David G. Carlson
Articles
This article assesses the opening three chapters of Hegel's monumental "Science of Logic," a work largely unknown in the United States but recognized in Europe as the foundation of Hegel's impressive philosophical edifice. Hegel's task was to develop a foundation-free philosophy, in which the inherent contradictions in concepts caused the self-destruction of the concept and the generation of a new, improved concept. Hegel begins his work by examining the concept of Pure Being. Being itself shows to be finite, however. Being repeals itself and propels itself into thought. "Reality" therefore gives way to "ideality." Upon entering the realm of the …
Kenneth Starr: Diabolically Evil?, Jeanne L. Schroeder, David G. Carlson
Kenneth Starr: Diabolically Evil?, Jeanne L. Schroeder, David G. Carlson
Articles
No abstract provided.
Origins Of The Game Theory Of Law And The Limits Of Harmony In Plato's Laws, Arthur J. Jacobson
Origins Of The Game Theory Of Law And The Limits Of Harmony In Plato's Laws, Arthur J. Jacobson
Articles
In his last dialogue, the Laws, Plato views citizens in the polis as players in a game. Just as contemporary game theory, Plato considers games to be states of strategic interaction. Yet the game of the Laws differs from those of game theory in one important respect. Where game theory assumes that players are rational--that they choose strategies, or rules for taking action at each instant of a game, in order to maximize payoffs--Plato explores the conditions under which rationality, as game theory defines it, is possible.
Plato thus agrees with game theory that rational, maximizing behavior is a necessary …
Introduction, David G. Carlson
Pragmatism, Pluralism, And Legal Interpretation: Posner's And Rorty's Justice Without Metaphysics Meets Hate Speech, Michel Rosenfeld
Pragmatism, Pluralism, And Legal Interpretation: Posner's And Rorty's Justice Without Metaphysics Meets Hate Speech, Michel Rosenfeld
Articles
No abstract provided.
Habermas And The Postal Rule, Peter Goodrich
Preface, Michel Rosenfeld
Translating Legendre Or, The Poetical Sermon Of A Contemporary Jurist, Peter Goodrich
Translating Legendre Or, The Poetical Sermon Of A Contemporary Jurist, Peter Goodrich
Articles
No abstract provided.
Jacob Burns And The Institute For Advanced Legal Studies, David G. Carlson
Jacob Burns And The Institute For Advanced Legal Studies, David G. Carlson
Articles
No abstract provided.
On The Margins Of Microeconomics, David G. Carlson
Judaism And Postmodernism, Suzanne Last Stone
Timeless Rules: Can Normative Closure And Legal Indetermincy Be Reconciled?, Charles M. Yablon
Timeless Rules: Can Normative Closure And Legal Indetermincy Be Reconciled?, Charles M. Yablon
Articles
No abstract provided.
The Idea Of A Legal Unconscious, Arthur J. Jacobson
Autopoiesis And Positivism, Richard H. Weisberg