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J.L. Austin and the Law
Exculpation and the Explication of Responsibility
Daniel Yeager
In investigating the relationship between accusation and excuse, this study uncovers something about the criminal law's peculiar way of interpreting human action. Identifying that something can move us a little closer to discovery or agreement and just what it is that is staked in criminal law. What is staked in any discussion of criminal law is the meaning and operation of 'responsibility,' which makes human action and its consequences so tragic. The author confronts the idea of responsibility by mapping the work of J. L. Austin onto the criminal law. Doing so entails considering the extent to which the language of criminal law can be reconciled with ordinary language, a project that entails considering whether the language of criminal law is ordinary language. This method of philosophizing attempts to get a sharpened perception of the world by seeking to understand why we speak as we do in specific speech situations. Ordinary-language philosophy presupposes that to attain knowledge of our language is to attain knowledge of whatever
Details
Details
Author
Author
University Press Copublishing Division / Bucknell University Press
Pages: 216 Trim: 6¾ x 9¾
978-1-61148-233-1 • Hardback • November 2005 •
$100.00
• (£77.00)
Subjects:
Philosophy / Reference
Daniel Yeager
is professor of law at California Western School of Law.
J.L. Austin and the Law
Exculpation and the Explication of Responsibility
Hardback
$100.00
Summary
Summary
In investigating the relationship between accusation and excuse, this study uncovers something about the criminal law's peculiar way of interpreting human action. Identifying that something can move us a little closer to discovery or agreement and just what it is that is staked in criminal law. What is staked in any discussion of criminal law is the meaning and operation of 'responsibility,' which makes human action and its consequences so tragic. The author confronts the idea of responsibility by mapping the work of J. L. Austin onto the criminal law. Doing so entails considering the extent to which the language of criminal law can be reconciled with ordinary language, a project that entails considering whether the language of criminal law is ordinary language. This method of philosophizing attempts to get a sharpened perception of the world by seeking to understand why we speak as we do in specific speech situations. Ordinary-language philosophy presupposes that to attain knowledge of our language is to attain knowledge of whatever
Details
Details
University Press Copublishing Division / Bucknell University Press
Pages: 216 Trim: 6¾ x 9¾
978-1-61148-233-1 • Hardback • November 2005 •
$100.00
• (£77.00)
Subjects:
Philosophy / Reference
Author
Author
Daniel Yeager
is professor of law at California Western School of Law.
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