ABSTRACT

This book directly addressed the study of mechanisms producing court rulings. It is this part of law, located in the wake of statutory provisions, that was examined afresh, in its work of enunciation, interpretation, implementation, invention, perpetuation, and transformation of the law. This book also represents, on the specific issue of the relationship between law and morality, an endeavor to “repatriate” morality to a totally mundane setting. Morality, far from being able to rise above human action, merely constitutes its daily structure and expression. Its configuration and realization are located only in human action, even though the latter gives itself the task of performing justice.