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Legal ReasoningBarbara A. SpellmanUniversity of Virginia School of Law Frederick SchauerUniversity of Virginia School of Law February 7, 2012 Virginia Public Law and Legal Theory Research Paper No. 2012-09 Abstract: The nature of legal reasoning, and its relationship with reasoning, has long been a topic of importance for lawyers and legal scholars. But it is also a topic with psychological implications, especially cognitive ones, and indeed most of the existing views about legal reasoning depend on psychological assumptions about the way in which ordinary people, lawyers, and judges reason and make decisions. This article, a chapter in the forthcoming Oxford Handbook on Thinking and Reasoning (K. Holyoak & R. Morrison eds.), explores the intersection between cognitive and social psychology, on the one hand, and legal reasoning and thinking and decision making, on the other. It attempts to show how existing psychological research is germane to the important questions about the nature legal reasoning – particularly with respect to precedent, analogy, authority, and rule-following – but even more it attempts to suggest a range of topics and questions that additions to the now-small body of psychological research might usefully address.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 49 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: February 7, 2012 ; Last revised: February 14, 2012Suggested Citation |
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