000 02595nam a2200241 i 4500
005 20220507171653.0
008 141114s2014 enk b 001 0 eng d
020 _a9781474202053
040 _aMAIN
082 0 4 _a340.1
100 1 _aRodriguez-Blanco, Veronica,
245 1 0 _aLaw and authority under the guise of the good
_h[electronic resource] /
_cby Veronica Rodriguez-Blanco.
300 _a1 online resource (x, 231 pages).
500 _aBloomsbury Pub Ebook
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 217-225) and index.
520 8 _aThe received view on the nature of legal authority contains the idea that a sound account of legitimate authority will explain how a legal authority has a right to command and the addressee a duty to obey. The received view fails to explain, however, how legal authority truly operates upon human beings as rational creatures with specific psychological makeups. This book takes a bottom-up approach, beginning at the microscopic level of agency and practical reason and leading to the justificatory framework of authority. The book argues that an understanding of the nature of legal normativity involves an understanding of the nature and structure of practical reason in the context of the law, and advances the idea that legal authority and normativity are intertwined. This point can be summarised thus: if we are able to understand both how the agent exercises his or her practical reason under legal directives and commands and how the agent engages his or her practical reason by following legal rules grounded on reasons for actions as good-making characteristics, then we can fully grasp the nature of legal authority and legal normativity. Using the philosophies of action enshrined in the works of Elisabeth Anscombe, Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas, the study explains practical reason as diachronic future-directed intention in action and argues that this conception illuminates the structure of practical reason of the legal rules' addressees. The account is comprehensive and enables us to distinguish authoritative and normative legal rules in just and good legal systems from 'apparent' authoritative and normative legal rules of evil legal systems. At the heart of the book is the methodological view of a 'practical turn' to elucidate the nature of legal normativity and authority
650 0 _aLaw
650 0 _aLegal authorities.
650 0 _aNorm (Philosophy)
650 0 _aPractical reason.
856 4 0 _uhttps://doi.org/10.5040/9781474202053?locatt=label:secondary_bloomsburyCollections
942 _cEBK
999 _c17486
_d17486