ABSTRACT

This book brings together contributions from leading figures in legal studies on analogy and related forms of reasoning in the law. Analogical reasoning-which relies on the concept of two different things being in some way like each other-is hugely important not just in the practice of law, but it is nonetheless strongly contested. This volume raises key questions like: What is the logical, argumentative, rhetorical, or just heuristic force of analogy in law? Is analogy really different from extensive interpretation, reasoning by precedent and appeal to paradigm?

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

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chapter 1|19 pages

Imitation and analogy

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chapter 2|16 pages

Indefeasible analogical argument

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chapter 3|15 pages

Is analogy a form of legal reasoning?

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chapter 5|13 pages

Analogy and balancing

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The partial reducibility thesis and its problems
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chapter 6|7 pages

Analogy and balancing

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A reply to David Duarte
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chapter 7|14 pages

Analogy and balancing once again

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A reply to Bartosz Brożek
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chapter 8|12 pages

Argument by analogy in the law

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chapter 9|28 pages

Undoing damage by analogy

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As if (almost) nothing happened, with notes on the meaning of everything
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