Eidetics of Law-Making Acts: Parts, Wholes and Degrees of Existence
In my paper I introduce the phenomenological concept of “eidetics” and its application to law. I show that, according to this approach grounded in the works of Reinach (1913/1989) and Stein (1925), the problem of the existence and validity of the law can be fruitfully analysed in terms of parts-who...
Saved in:
Main Author: | Francesca De Vecchi |
---|---|
Format: | article |
Language: | EN FR IT |
Published: |
Rosenberg & Sellier
2017
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://doaj.org/article/db71a0e463844553965a1e68fae878f6 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Similar Items
-
Rationality as the Normative Dimension of Speech Acts
by: Federica Berdini
Published: (2016) -
Twofold pictorial experience, propositional imagining and recognitional concepts: a critique of Walton’s visual make-believe
by: Marco Arienti
Published: (2018) -
Love, Plural Subjects & Normative Constraint
by: Joseph Kisolo-Ssonko
Published: (2016) -
Phenomenologizing cognitive neuroscience?
by: Roberta De Monticelli, et al.
Published: (2016) -
From a Phenomenology of the Reciprocal Nature of Habits and Values to an Understanding of the Intersubjective Ground of Normative Social Reality
by: Frank Scalambrino
Published: (2016)