Pragmatism, Law, and Language

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Alethic Modalities
Brandom
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Classical American Pragmatism
conceptual engineering
Contemporary Deweyans
democratic theory
Deontic Logic
Deweyan Democracy
Deweyan Democrats
Discursive Practice
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Everyday Pragmatism
Frege Geach Problem
Fundamental Moral Facts
Georgetown University Law Center
Good Life
Illocutionary Intentions
jurisprudence
legal
Legal Content
legal interpretation
Legal Pragmatists
Lind
Logical Vocabulary
Luck Egalitarians
metaethics analysis
Metalinguistic Negotiation
Moral Reliability
normative
philosophy
philosophy of law
political
pragmatic
pragmatist approaches to legal reasoning
Semantic Pragmatism
Semantic Skepticism
semantic theory
social
Statutory Content
Truth Conditionalist Approach
Vice Versa
Work Family Conflict

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138731509
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Feb 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This volume puts leading pragmatists in the philosophy of language, including Robert Brandom, in contact with scholars concerned with what pragmatism has come to mean for the law. Each contribution uses the resources of pragmatism to tackle fundamental problems in the philosophy of language, the philosophy of law, and social and political philosophy. In many chapters, the version of pragmatism deployed proves a fruitful approach to its subject matter; in others, shortcomings of the specific brand of pragmatism are revealed. The result is a clearer understanding of what pragmatism has meant and can mean across these tightly related philosophical areas. The book, then, is itself pragmatism in action: it seeks to clarify its unifying concept by examining the practices that centrally involve it.

Graham Hubbs is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Idaho, USA.

Douglas Lind is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Idaho, USA.