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图书目录: Foreword
Authors Preface A. THEORETICAL BASES I. Elements of Institutional Legal Positivism 1. The Ontology of Normative Institutionalism 2. The Language of Practical Realms 3. The Logic of Practical Thinking 4. Why do I Conceive of the Theory of Action as Formalist and why as Finalist ? 5. Comments on the Definition and the Systematics of Institutions 6. Some Legal-Philosophical Implications of Normative Institutionalism 7. Why Legal Positivism? II. Towards a Formal-Teleological Theory of Action 1. Starting Points 2. Common-Sense Theory of Action 3. Behaviour as Transformation. Description of Actions. Meaningful Actions 4. Scope for Action and Freedom 5. Action as a Process of Selection based on Information 6. identity and Difference of Actions 7. Teleology 7.1.The Relation between Teleology and Causality 7.2. Some Remarks on the Principle of Causality 7.3.Linear Causality and Causal Networks 7.4. Some Notes on the Ontology of Ends 7.5. Discovery, Optimisation and Choice of Means 8. On the Problem of the Dynamics of the System of Ends 9. Reducing the Complexity of Teleological Reflection 10. Remarks on the Methodology of the Analysis of Action III. The Significance of Logic for Modem Legal Theory. Fundamental Problems of Institutionalist Normativism 1. Main Areas of Logical Analysis in the Field of Jurisprudence 1.1. Logic as the Basis of the Structure Theory of Law 1.2. Rational Legal Argumentation 2. Logic, Law, and the Problems of the Logic of Norms 2.1. The Semantic Basis of the Logic of Norms and Action-related (or Practical) Disciplines 2.2. The Existence of Normative Regulations and the Institutionalist Conception of Law 2.3. Institutionalist Normativism and the Logic of Norms 3. The Idea of a Logic of Norms. Remarks on a Few Fundamental Problems 3.1. The Semantics of the Normative Sentences 3.2. Normative Sentence and Truth Value 3.3. Are there Normological Inferences? 3.4. Logic of Norms or Deontic Logic? 3.5. The Meta-postulate of the Non-derivability of 'Ought' from 'Is' and of 'Is' from 'Ought' 3.6. Compound Normative Sentences, particularly the Hypothetical Normative Sentence 4. The Institutionalist Structure Theory of Law 5. The Plausibility Argumentation and Legal Hermeneutics in the Conception of Logicism B. TREATISES ON LEGAL THEORY AND LEGAL SOCIOLOGY IV. Ontology, Hermeneutics and the Concept of Valid Law 1. The Legal Problem of Validity 2. 'Is' and 'Ought' 3. The Field of Logical Operations 4. Institutional Ontology of Norms 5. The Juridical Definition of Valid Law 6. Legal Validity and Hermeneutics 7. Decision-Making Practice and Valid Law " 8. Law and Purpose: On the Debate between Formalism and Instrumentalism V. Constitutional Theory in the Light of the New Institutionalism 1. Preliminary Remarks Concerning Terminology 2. The Projected Task 3. Fundamental Problems of Constitutional Theory 4. Theses of Institutional Legal Positivism which are relevant to the Constitutional Theory 5. Comments on the Fundamental Problems of the Constitutional Theory 5.1. State and Constitution 5.2. The Indispensability of the Constitution for the Existence of the State 5.3. The EffectiveneSS of the Constitution 5.4. The Institutional Unity of the System of Legal Sources 5.5. The Legal Stabilization of the Constitution: The Law establishing the Constitution (the Basic Law, the Con- stitutional Charter) 5.6. The Essential Content of the Constitution 5.7. The Institutional Conception of Constitutional Knowledge 6. Political Power and the Structure of the Constitution 7. The Problem of Legitimacy 8. The Constitution and the Governing Ideas of Democracy VI. The Formal-teleological Theory of Action and Criminal Law 1. Some Problems Facing Criminal Law and the Theory of Action and the Goals of my Investigation 2. Characteristic Features of the Formal-teleological Theory of Action 3. The Concept of 'Institutional Legal Positivism' 4. Fundamental Principles of the Teleological Theory of Action in Relation to Criminal Law 5. 'Action' and 'Omission' in Criminal Law Doctrine 6. The Generic Conceptof Crime in Criminal Law 7. The Concept of Guilt 8. Notes on the Metatheory of Subsumption in Criminal Law VII. Institutional Theory and Institutional Legal Positivism 1. The Program of my Inquiry 2. A Characterisation of Institutional Legal Positivism 3. My Concept of Action and the Semantic Foundations of Practical Philosophy 4. The Concept of the institution and its Typoiogy 5. Institutional Theory in Modem Jurisprudence 6. Institutional Theories in Sociology 7. Institutional Legal Positivism contrasted with Juristic and Sociological Institutional Theories 8. Institutional Normativism and Sociology VIII. Sociology and the Normative Institutional Theory. Reflections on Helmut Schelsky's Institutional Theory from the Point of View of the Normative Institutional Ontology Introduction 1. Behaviour and Action 2. The Language of Practical Philosophy 3. Normative Institutional Ontology 4. The Role of the Law in Schelsky's Theory 5. Schelsky and Luhmann's System-theoretical Method 6. Theses for a Theoretical Sociology C. TREATISES ON LEGAL POLITICS AND THEORY OF JUSTICE IX. Legal-Political Analysis of Institutions 1. Legal Policy as a Scientific Problem of our Time 2. The Relevance of the Legal-Philosophical Approach to Legal-political Analyses 3. Characterization of the Science of Legal Policy 4. Rational Thinking and Practical Cognition 5. Two Types of Legal Argumentation 6. Rationality and the Legal-political Discussion 7. Types of Legal-political Argumentation 8. The Sources of Practical Dissent and of the Search for Consensus 9. Common Flaws in Legal-Political Argumentations 10. The Conception of Democracy and Legal Policy 11. A Functional Analysis of Institutions and Democratic Legal Policy 12. Democracy and Power 13. Determinants of Political Control 14. The Role of the Sciences and of Experts in a Democracy 15. Democratic Legal Policy and the Concept of Justice X. The Conditio Humana and the Ideal of Justice 1. The Role of the Theory of Justice 2. The Anthropological Approach to the Problem of Justice 3. Ideals of Justice as Determinants of Action 4. The Analytical and Dialectic Character of Reflections on Justice 5. Formal Postulates of Justice 6. Natural Law or Convictions of Justice? 7. Postulates of the Just Application of the Law 8. Balanced Role-play as a Postulate of Justice 9. Collective Action 10. Present-day Aspects of the Problems of Justice Bibliography Original Sources |