Description
Reinach and the Foundations of Private Law presents a comprehensive analysis of Adolf Reinach’s philosophical work and its profound implications for legal theory. The volume brings together leading scholars to demonstrate how Reinach’s phenomenological approach to social acts and states of affairs offers innovative perspectives on the nature of private law.
The contributors explore Reinach’s critique of traditional legal positivism and his alternative framework for understanding rights, obligations, and legal relations. This work demonstrates that Reinach’s philosophy provides valuable resources for contemporary debates in jurisprudence, particularly regarding the metaphysical foundations of law. The book bridges phenomenology and legal philosophy, showing how Reinach’s insights into intentionality and social ontology can reshape our understanding of property, contract, tort, and other core areas of private law.







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