Приказ основних података о документу

dc.creatorTuzet, Giovanni
dc.date.accessioned2024-05-21T11:24:28Z
dc.date.available2024-05-21T11:24:28Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.identifier.issn0003-2565
dc.identifier.urihttps://ralf.ius.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1884
dc.description.abstractDigestive Jurisprudence is the view that judicial decisions depend on what judges had for breakfast. The view is usually associated with Franks version of Legal Realism. The paper shows that, disputable as it is, that view comes from the philosophical background of Peirces pragmatism and the legal background of Holmes prediction theory. Peirces pragmatism was an account of concepts in terms of their predictable consequences. Holmes prediction theory was an account of law in terms of predictions of what judges will do. And Legal Realism focused on judicial behavior as determined by various factors including, in its most extreme and provocative version, breakfast quality and digestive processes. The paper does not ascertain whether the digestive view is true (to some extent); rather, it makes the working hypothesis that breakfast quality, or digestion quality, is not a sufficient condition of a certain outcome but, most likely, a bias-arouser.en
dc.rightsopenAccess
dc.sourceAnali Pravnog fakulteta u Beogradu
dc.subjectpragmatismen
dc.subjectlegal realisen
dc.subjectholmesen
dc.subjectfranken
dc.subjectdigestive Jurisprudenceen
dc.titleDigestive jurisprudence restated: On breakfast and digestion as bias-arousersen
dc.typearticle
dc.rights.licenseCC BY
dc.citation.epage439
dc.citation.issue3
dc.citation.other71(3): 417-439
dc.citation.spage417
dc.citation.volume71
dc.identifier.doi10.51204/Anali_PFBU_23301A
dc.identifier.fulltexthttps://ralf.ius.bg.ac.rs/bitstream/id/1939/1877.pdf
dc.identifier.rcubconv_3435
dc.type.versionpublishedVersion


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Приказ основних података о документу