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Making the Law Explicit: The Normativity of Legal Argumentation (European Academy of Legal Theory Monograph) PDF

321 Pages·2008·3.09 MB·English
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JOBNAME:Klatt PAGE:1 SESS:8 OUTPUT:TueAug1916:30:032008 MAKING THE LAW EXPLICIT Legal argumentation consists in the interpretation of texts. Therefore, it has a natural connection to the philosophy of language. Central issues of this connection, however, lack a clear answer. For instance, how much freedom do judges have in applying the law? How are the literal and the purposive approaches related to one another? How can we distinguish between applying the law and making the law? This book provides answers by means of a complex and detailed theory of literal meaning. A new legal method is introduced, namely the further development of the law. It is so far unknown in Anglo-American jurispru- dence, but it is shown that this new method helps in solving some of the most crucial puzzles in jurisprudence. At its centre the book addresses legal indeterminism and refutes linguistic-philosophical reasons for indeterminacy. It spells out the norma- tivecharacterofinterpretationasemphasisedbyRazand,withthehelpof Robert Brandom’s normative pragmatics, it is shown that the relativism of interpretation from a normative perspective does not at all justify scepti- cism. On the contrary, it supports the claim that legal argumentation can beobjective,andmaintainsthatstatementsonthemeaningofastatutecan be right or wrong, and take on inter-subjective validity accordingly. This book breaks new ground in transferring Brandom’s philosophy to legal theoretical problems and presents an original and exciting analysis of the semantic argument in legal argumentation. It was the recipient of the European Award for Legal Theory in 2002. European Academy of Legal Theory Series: Volume 7 ColumnsDesignLtd / Job:Klatt / Division:Prelims_edited /Pg.Position:1/ Date:19/8 JOBNAME:Klatt PAGE:2 SESS:5 OUTPUT:TueAug1916:30:032008 EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF LEGAL THEORY MONOGRAPH SERIES General Editors Professor Mark Van Hoecke Professor François Ost Professor Luc Wintgens Titles in this Series Moral Conflict and Legal Reasoning Scott Veitch The Harmonisation of European Private Law edited by Mark Van Hoecke & Francois Ost On Law and Legal Reasoning Fernando Atria Law as Communication Mark Van Hoecke Legisprudence edited by Luc Wintgens Epistemology and Methodology of Comparative Law edited by Mark van Hoecke The Policy of Law A Legal Theoretical Framework Mauro Zamboni ColumnsDesignLtd / Job:Klatt / Division:Prelims_edited /Pg.Position:2/ Date:12/8 JOBNAME:Klatt PAGE:3 SESS:10 OUTPUT:TueAug1916:32:222008 Making the Law Explicit The Normativity of Legal Argumentation Matthias Klatt ColumnsDesignLtd / Job:Klatt / Division:Prelims_edited /Pg.Position:1/ Date:19/8 JOBNAME:Klatt PAGE:4 SESS:8 OUTPUT:TueAug1916:30:032008 PublishedinNorthAmerica(USandCanada)by HartPublishing c/oInternationalSpecializedBookServices 920NE58thAvenue,Suite300 Portland,OR97213–3786 USA Tel:+15032873093ortoll-free:(1)8009446190 Fax:+15032808832 E-mail:[email protected] Website:www.isbs.com ©MatthiasKlatt2008 MatthiasKlatthasassertedhisrightundertheCopyright,DesignsandPatentsAct1988,to beidentifiedastheauthorofthiswork. Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced,storedinaretrieval system,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyanymean,withoutthepriorpermissionofHart Publishing,orasexpresslypermittedbylaworunderthetermsagreedwiththeappropriate reprographicrightsorganisation.Enquiriesconcerningreproductionwhichmaynotbe coveredbytheaboveshouldbeaddressedtoHartPublishingattheaddressbelow. HartPublishing,16CWorcesterPlace,Oxford,OX12JW Telephone:+44(0)1865517530Fax:+44(0)1865510710 E-mail:[email protected] Website:http://www.hartpub.co.uk BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData DataAvailable ISBN-13:978-1-84113-491-8 TypesetbyColumnsDesignLtd,Reading PrintedandboundinGreatBritainby CPIAntonyRoweLtd,Chippenham ColumnsDesignLtd / Job:Klatt / Division:Prelims_edited /Pg.Position:2/ Date:19/8 JOBNAME:Klatt PAGE:5 SESS:8 OUTPUT:TueAug1916:30:032008 The sense of a sentence—one would like to say—may, of course, leave this or that open, but the sentence must nevertheless have a definite sense. An indefinite sense—that would really not be a sense at all. Here one thinks perhaps: if I say ‘I have locked the man up fast in the room—there is only one door left open’—then I simply haven’t locked him in at all; his being locked in is a sham. One would be inclined to say here: ‘You haven’t done anything at all’. An enclosure with a hole in it is as good as none.—But is that true? (Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations, § 99) ColumnsDesignLtd / Job:Klatt / Division:Prelims_edited /Pg.Position:1/ Date:19/8 JOBNAME:Klatt PAGE:6 SESS:5 OUTPUT:TueAug1916:30:032008 ColumnsDesignLtd / Job:Klatt / Division:Prelims_edited /Pg.Position:2/ Date:12/8 JOBNAME:Klatt PAGE:7 SESS:5 OUTPUT:TueAug1916:30:032008 Preface This book is the English translation of a German monograph (Matthias Klatt(2004),TheoriederWortlautgrenze.SemantischeNormativitätinder juristischen Argumentation, Baden-Baden, Nomos). For the purposes of this edition, the introduction was added and the first and third chapters were slightly shortened. The German book had benefited from the inspir- ing advice of Professor Dr. Dr. h. c. Robert Alexy (University of Kiel) and ProfessorDr.RalfDreier(UniversityofGöttingen)aswellasfromthelong lasting support by the German National Academic Foundation. It received the European Award for Legal Theory 2002. This edition was made possible by generous support from the Warden and Fellows of New College, the Young Academy and Hart Publishing. The translation was provided with great care and skill by Jörg Rampacher and Neil Mussett. It further profited from most valuable advice by Professor Dr. Dres. h. c. Stanley L. Paulson (Washington University, St. Louis). To all these people and institutions I owe my profound thanks. New College, Oxford July 2008 Matthias Klatt ColumnsDesignLtd / Job:Klatt / Division:Prelims_edited /Pg.Position:1/ Date:12/8 JOBNAME:Klatt PAGE:8 SESS:5 OUTPUT:TueAug1916:30:032008 ColumnsDesignLtd / Job:Klatt / Division:Prelims_edited /Pg.Position:2/ Date:12/8 JOBNAME:Klatt PAGE:9 SESS:9 OUTPUT:TueAug1916:30:032008 Table of Contents Preface vii Introduction 1 I. The Doctrine of the Limits of the Wording 4 A. Interpretation as a Legal Method 4 B. Judicial Development of the Law 5 C. Why the Differentiation Matters 6 II. Interpretation and Invention in English Legal Reasoning 7 A. Statutory Interpretation and Democracy 7 (i) The Purposive Versus the Literal Approach 7 (ii) Law-Applying Versus Law-Making 9 (iii)The Missing Method: Judicial Development of the Law 12 B. Human Rights Act: What Is Possible? 13 C. Result 14 III. Towards a Common European Approach 15 IV. The Possibility of the Rule of Law Defended 18 V. The Sceptical Challenge: Indeterminacy and Vagueness 19 A. The Concept of Indeterminacy 20 B. Vagueness as Boundarylessness 20 (i) Higher-order Vagueness 21 (ii) The Significance of Interpretation in the Law 22 C. Scepticism in Law 22 VI. The Rationality and Objectivity of Legal Reasoning 23 A. Justification, Rationality and Legitimacy 24 B. The Dworkin–Fish Controversy 25 C. ‘B’ Semantics versus ‘KP’ Semantics 26 D. The Objectivity of Law Defended 27 VII.At a Glance 27 A. General Approach 27 B. Chapter 1 28 C. Chapter 2 29 D. Chapter 3 31 ColumnsDesignLtd / Job:Klatt / Division:Prelims_edited /Pg.Position:1/ Date:19/8

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