This volume highlights essays by legal scholars and philosophers on the legal philosophy of Adolf Reinach. Though Reinach has been the subject of resurgent recent interest in private law theory, his work remains oblique to many contemporary legal theorists and students. This volume situates his contributions in contemporary theory.
This volume highlights essays by legal scholars and philosophers on the legal philosophy of Adolf Reinach. Though Reinach has been the subject of resurgent recent interest in private law theory, his work remains oblique to many contemporary legal theorists and students. This volume situates his contributions in contemporary theory.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Introduction James Toomey; Part I. Reinach and His Method: 1. Promising, owning, enacting: Adolf Reinach's phenomenology of legal speech acts Marietta Auer; 2. Darwin's Reinach James Toomey; 3. Is there a legal a priori? On necessary, essential, and non-positive propositions in Reinach's theory Lorenz Kaehler; 4. Adolf Reinach, negation, and law Kimberly Baltzer-Jaray; Part II. Reinach and Private Law Theory: 5. Legal concepts as a deep structure of the law: Reinach's a priori in action Andrew S. Gold and Henry E. Smith; 6. Private law beyond the law Sandy Steel; 7. Reinach on personality and representation Paul B. Miller; 8. The ontology of liberties: reconciling Reinach and Hohfeld Olivier Massin; Part III. Reinach and Legal Concepts: 9. Adolf Reinach and Gerhart Husserl on the foundations of legal phenomenology and the temporality of law Stephan Kirste; 10. How to make gifts with words Emma Tieffenbach; 11. So close and yet so far: Reinach and Gilbert on promises Alessandro Salice and Olivier Massin; 12. The conceptual foundations of contract formation Crescente Molina.
Introduction James Toomey; Part I. Reinach and His Method: 1. Promising, owning, enacting: Adolf Reinach's phenomenology of legal speech acts Marietta Auer; 2. Darwin's Reinach James Toomey; 3. Is there a legal a priori? On necessary, essential, and non-positive propositions in Reinach's theory Lorenz Kaehler; 4. Adolf Reinach, negation, and law Kimberly Baltzer-Jaray; Part II. Reinach and Private Law Theory: 5. Legal concepts as a deep structure of the law: Reinach's a priori in action Andrew S. Gold and Henry E. Smith; 6. Private law beyond the law Sandy Steel; 7. Reinach on personality and representation Paul B. Miller; 8. The ontology of liberties: reconciling Reinach and Hohfeld Olivier Massin; Part III. Reinach and Legal Concepts: 9. Adolf Reinach and Gerhart Husserl on the foundations of legal phenomenology and the temporality of law Stephan Kirste; 10. How to make gifts with words Emma Tieffenbach; 11. So close and yet so far: Reinach and Gilbert on promises Alessandro Salice and Olivier Massin; 12. The conceptual foundations of contract formation Crescente Molina.
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