II. LEGAL ARGUMENTATIONS |
1. Identification and reconstruction of arguments
2. The reconstruction of argumentations
3. A paradigmatic case of legal reasoning: the judicial sentence
4. Judicial sentence and stock issues
5. Reconstruction of judicial argumentations
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IV. INDUCTIVE LOGIC
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1. The field of the probability
2. What is an inductive argument?
3. Some erroneous conceptions on the induction
4. The inductive strength of an argument
5. Induction and probability
6. Inductive Arguments
7. The inductive forms more usual in the legal practice
7.1 Inferences by enumeration
7.2 The analogy
7.3 The abduction |
VI. THEORIES OF ARGUMENTATION |
1. The theories of the contemporary legal argumentation
2. Constitutional principles and legal argumentation
3. Descriptive and normative models
3.1 The theory of Arnio
3.2 The theory of Alexy
3.3 The theory of MacCormick
3.4 The theory of Toulmin
4. The rhetoric
4.1 Topical and rhetorical
4.2 Perelman and the new rhetoric |