Under Cover of Science: American Legal-Economic Theory and the Quest for ObjectivityDuke University Press, 2007 M03 28 - 238 páginas For more than two decades, the law and economics movement has been one of the most influential and controversial schools of thought in American jurisprudence. In this authoritative intellectual history, James R. Hackney Jr. situates the modern law and economics movement within the trajectory of American jurisprudence from the early days of the Republic to the present. Hackney is particularly interested in the claims of objectivity or empiricism asserted by proponents of law and economics. He argues that the incorporation of economic analysis into legal decision making is not an inherently objective enterprise. Rather, law and economics often cloaks ideological determinations—particularly regarding the distribution of wealth—under the cover of science. Hackney demonstrates how legal-economic thought has been affected by the prevailing philosophical ideas about objectivity, which have in turn evolved in response to groundbreaking scientific discoveries. Thus Hackney’s narrative is a history not only of law and economics but also of select strands of philosophy and science. He traces forward from the seventeenth-century the interaction of legal thinking and economic analysis with ideas about the attainability of certitude. The principal legal-economic theories Hackney examines are those that emerged from classical legal thought, legal realism, law and neoclassical economics, and critical legal studies. He links these theories respectively to formalism, pragmatism, the analytic turn, and neopragmatism/postmodernism, and he explains how each of these schools of philosophical thought was influenced by specific scientific discoveries: Newtonian physics, Darwin’s theory of evolution, Einstein’s theories of relativity, and quantum mechanics. Under Cover of Science challenges claims that the contemporary law and economics movement is an objective endeavor by historicizing ideas about certitude and empiricism and their relation to legal-economic thought. |
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... Blackstone's Commentaries , Blackstone was " doing for the English legal system what Newton had done for the physical world . ” 42 Blackstone's was the first attempt to distill English com- mon law in a comprehensive way , and he did so ...
... Blackstone , this criticism might have been a bit overstated , since although Blackstone is ultimately connected to natural law theory , he arguably artic- ulates some positivist themes.88 Austin had no problem with an assertion that ...
... Blackstone , Commentaries , 1 : 30–31 . Ibid . , 30 . Dewey , The Quest for Certainty , 212 . Richard Cosgrove has noted that Blackstone's jurisprudence had broad im- plications for dealing with a wide range of social problems and ...
Contenido
TWO The Pragmatic Reconstruction | 39 |
THREE Neoclassicism and the Reprise of Formalism | 81 |
FOUR The Dissolution of American LegalEconomic Theory | 121 |
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Under Cover of Science: American Legal-Economic Theory and the Quest for ... James R. Hackney Vista previa limitada - 2007 |
Under Cover of Science: American Legal-Economic Theory and the Quest for ... James R. Hackney Jr. Vista previa limitada - 2007 |