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Understood one way, the branch of contemporary philosophical ethics
that goes by the label "metaethics" concerns certain second-order
questions about ethics-questions not in ethics, but rather ones
about our thought and talk about ethics, and how the ethical facts
(insofar as there are any) fit into reality. Analogously, the
branch of contemporary philosophy of law that is often called
"general jurisprudence" deals with certain second order questions
about law- questions not in the law, but rather ones about our
thought and talk about the law, and how legal facts (insofar as
there are any) fit into reality. Put more roughly (and using an
alternative spatial metaphor), metaethics concerns a range of
foundational questions about ethics, whereas general jurisprudence
concerns analogous questions about law. As these characterizations
suggest, the two sub-disciplines have much in common, and could be
thought to run parallel to each other. Yet, the connections between
the two are currently mostly ignored by philosophers, or at least
under-scrutinized. The new essays collected in this book are aimed
at changing this state of affairs. Dimensions of Normativity
collects together works by metaethicists and legal philosophers
that address a number of issues that are of common interest, with
the goal of accomplishing a new rapprochement between the two
sub-disciplines.
One of the first volumes in the new series of prestigious Oxford Handbooks, The Oxford Handbook of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of Law brings together specially commissioned essays by twenty-six of the foremost legal theorists currently writing, to provide a state of the art overview of jurisprudential scholarship.
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