Philosophy of Law : The Fundamentals.

By: Murphy, Mark CMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Fundamentals of Philosophy SerPublisher: Somerset : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, 2013Copyright date: ©2006Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (228 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781118008102Subject(s): LawGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Philosophy of Law : The FundamentalsDDC classification: 340/.1 LOC classification: K230.A367 -- M87 2007ebOnline resources: Click to View
Contents:
Intro -- Philosophy of Law -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 0.1 Philosophy, the Familiar, and the Unfamiliar -- 0.2 What Are Our Commonplaces About Law? -- 0.2.1 Law is a social phenomenon -- 0.2.2 Law is authoritative -- 0.2.3 Law is for the common good -- 0.3 The Course of Our Inquiry -- For Further Reading -- Chapter 1 Analytical Fundamentals: The Concept of Law -- 1.1 The Question, and its Importance -- 1.2 Basic Austinianism -- 1.3 Positivist Lessons -- 1.4 Hartian Positivism -- 1.5 Interlude: Hard and Soft Positivisms -- 1.6 Natural Law Theory -- 1.6.1 Fuller's procedural natural law theory -- 1.6.2 Aquinas's substantive natural law theory -- 1.7 A Suggested Resolution -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Chapter 2 Normative Fundamentals: The Basic Roles of Paradigmatic Legal Systems -- 2.1 What Are the Basic Roles in Paradigmatic Legal Systems? -- 2.2 The Role of Subject -- 2.3 The Role of Legislator -- 2.4 The Role of Judge -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Chapter 3 The Aims of Law -- 3.1 The Aims of Law and the Common Good -- 3.2 The Harm-to-others Principle -- 3.3 Challenges to the Harm-to-others Principle -- 3.3.1 Types of harm -- 3.3.2 The party harmed -- 3.4 Morals Legislation -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Chapter 4 The Nature and Aims of the Criminal Law -- 4.1 Types of Legal Norms -- 4.2 Crime and Punishment -- 4.3 Two Normative Theories of Punishment -- 4.3.1 Utilitarian theories -- 4.3.2 Retributivist theories -- 4.4 Justification and Excuse -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Chapter 5 The Nature and Aims of Tort Law -- 5.1 Torts and Crimes -- 5.2 Torts and Damages -- 5.3 Economic and Justice Accounts of Negligence Torts -- 5.4 Elements of the Negligence Tort -- 5.4.1 Duty -- 5.4.2 Breach -- 5.4.3 Cause -- 5.4.4 Loss -- 5.5 Damages -- 5.6 Intentional Torts and Torts of Strict Liability -- For Further Reading.
Notes -- Chapter 6 Challenging the Law -- 6.1 Putting Legal Roles to the Question -- 6.2 Against the Role of Subject: Philosophical Anarchism -- 6.3 Against the Role of Legislator: Marxism, Feminist Legal Theory, Critical Race Theory -- 6.4 Against the Role of Judge: American Legal Realism, Critical Legal Studies -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Index.
Summary: Mark C. Murphy is Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University, where he works in moral, political, and legal philosophy. He is the author of Natural Law and Practical Rationality (2001), An Essay on Divine Authority (2002), and Natural Law in Jurisprudence and Politics (2006), and the editor of Alasdair MacIntyre (2003).
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
No physical items for this record

Intro -- Philosophy of Law -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 0.1 Philosophy, the Familiar, and the Unfamiliar -- 0.2 What Are Our Commonplaces About Law? -- 0.2.1 Law is a social phenomenon -- 0.2.2 Law is authoritative -- 0.2.3 Law is for the common good -- 0.3 The Course of Our Inquiry -- For Further Reading -- Chapter 1 Analytical Fundamentals: The Concept of Law -- 1.1 The Question, and its Importance -- 1.2 Basic Austinianism -- 1.3 Positivist Lessons -- 1.4 Hartian Positivism -- 1.5 Interlude: Hard and Soft Positivisms -- 1.6 Natural Law Theory -- 1.6.1 Fuller's procedural natural law theory -- 1.6.2 Aquinas's substantive natural law theory -- 1.7 A Suggested Resolution -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Chapter 2 Normative Fundamentals: The Basic Roles of Paradigmatic Legal Systems -- 2.1 What Are the Basic Roles in Paradigmatic Legal Systems? -- 2.2 The Role of Subject -- 2.3 The Role of Legislator -- 2.4 The Role of Judge -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Chapter 3 The Aims of Law -- 3.1 The Aims of Law and the Common Good -- 3.2 The Harm-to-others Principle -- 3.3 Challenges to the Harm-to-others Principle -- 3.3.1 Types of harm -- 3.3.2 The party harmed -- 3.4 Morals Legislation -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Chapter 4 The Nature and Aims of the Criminal Law -- 4.1 Types of Legal Norms -- 4.2 Crime and Punishment -- 4.3 Two Normative Theories of Punishment -- 4.3.1 Utilitarian theories -- 4.3.2 Retributivist theories -- 4.4 Justification and Excuse -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Chapter 5 The Nature and Aims of Tort Law -- 5.1 Torts and Crimes -- 5.2 Torts and Damages -- 5.3 Economic and Justice Accounts of Negligence Torts -- 5.4 Elements of the Negligence Tort -- 5.4.1 Duty -- 5.4.2 Breach -- 5.4.3 Cause -- 5.4.4 Loss -- 5.5 Damages -- 5.6 Intentional Torts and Torts of Strict Liability -- For Further Reading.

Notes -- Chapter 6 Challenging the Law -- 6.1 Putting Legal Roles to the Question -- 6.2 Against the Role of Subject: Philosophical Anarchism -- 6.3 Against the Role of Legislator: Marxism, Feminist Legal Theory, Critical Race Theory -- 6.4 Against the Role of Judge: American Legal Realism, Critical Legal Studies -- For Further Reading -- Notes -- Index.

Mark C. Murphy is Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University, where he works in moral, political, and legal philosophy. He is the author of Natural Law and Practical Rationality (2001), An Essay on Divine Authority (2002), and Natural Law in Jurisprudence and Politics (2006), and the editor of Alasdair MacIntyre (2003).

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

Powered by Koha