Description
The Metaphysics of Legal Facts investigates a fundamental question in philosophy of law: what is the nature of legal facts? This work explores whether legal facts exist independently of human institutions or are constitutively dependent on legal systems and human practices.
Samuele Chilovi examines various metaphysical frameworks for understanding legal facts, considering their ontological status and how they relate to physical and social reality. The book addresses key questions about legal realism, the grounding of legal facts, and the relationship between law and reality.
Part of the Elements in Philosophy of Law series, this element provides a comprehensive introduction to contemporary debates surrounding the metaphysics of law, suitable for philosophers, legal theorists, and students of philosophy of law seeking to understand the foundational nature of legal systems and legal facts.







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