Una consideración crítica de dos metodologías de la jurisprudencia general
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Resumen
Este resumen es generado por máquina.Este estudio critica la teoría del sillón y la jurisprudencia empirista, encontrando que ambas ofrecen explicaciones incompletas de la ley. Un enfoque equilibrado que integre las perspectivas de los participantes y de los científicos sociales es necesario para una comprensión integral de los fenómenos jurídicos.
Área De La Ciencia
- Filosofía del derecho
- Teoría legal
- Estudios socio-jurídicos
Sus Antecedentes
- La jurisprudencia general en el mundo de habla inglesa se basa predominantemente en la teoría del sillón.
- La jurisprudencia empírica, particularmente el naturalismo reductivo, ha surgido como una alternativa debido a las deficiencias percibidas en la teoría del sillón.
Objetivo Del Estudio
- Evaluar críticamente la teoría del sillón y la jurisprudencia empírica como métodos para comprender el derecho.
- Proponer un enfoque metodológico más completo del complejo fenómeno social del derecho.
Principales Métodos
- Análisis conceptual de las metodologías jurisprudenciales existentes.
- Crítica argumentativa tanto de la teoría del sillón como de la jurisprudencia empírica.
Principales Resultados
- Tanto la teoría del sillón como la jurisprudencia empírica ofrecen explicaciones parciales e inadecuadas del derecho.
- Cada metodología, a pesar de sus limitaciones, capta ciertos aspectos válidos de los fenómenos jurídicos.
Conclusiones
- Una comprensión integral de la ley requiere integrar las perspectivas internas de los participantes en la práctica legal con los puntos de vista externos de los científicos sociales y los observadores críticos.
- La navegación entre estas perspectivas es crucial para superar las deficiencias de los métodos jurisprudenciales existentes.
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