Search Books
Understanding Labor and Emp… Sport: Law and Practice: Th…

The Image of Law: Deleuze, Bergson, Spinoza (Cultural Memory in the Present)

Author Alexandre Lefebvre
Publisher Stanford University Press
Category Law
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
⌛ 🇨🇦 Canada pricing being fetched… Prices will appear once fetched — usually within a few minutes.
Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN0804759855
ISBN-139780804759854
CategoryLaw
MarketplaceCanada 🇨🇦

Description

The Image of Law is the first book to examine law through the thought of twentieth-century French philosopher Gilles Deleuze. Lefebvre challenges the truism that judges must apply and not create law. In a plain and lucid style, he activates Deleuze's key themes—his critique of dogmatic thought, theory of time, and concept of the encounter—within the context of adjudication in order to claim that judgment has an inherent, and not an accidental or willful, creativity. The book begins with a critique of the neo-Kantian tradition in legal theory (Hart, Dworkin, and Habermas) and proceeds to draw on Bergson's theory of perception and memory and Spinoza's conception of ethics in order to frame creativity as a necessary feature of judgment.
Logical Form and Language
View
Covert Policing: Law and Practice
View
Legal Research and Citation: Research Process Exercise…
View
Disputing Doctors
View
Wolf and Stanley on Environmental Law
View
A Vision of American Law: Judging Law, Literature, and…
View
Property and Justice
View
Wretched Sisters (Studies in Crime and Punishment)
View
Invisible Acts of Power: Channeling Grace in Your Ever…
View