Description
Book SynopsisIntroduction.- Part I Epistemological axis of the Communicational Theory of Law.- Epistemological analysis and Communicational Theory of Law.- Legal communication as a Semiosphere. The dialogue between authoring, authorship and legal authorities from the perspective of the Communicational Theory of Law.- Ambital and extra-ambital justice in the Communicational Theory of Law. A look from the spanish judicial ethics.- When claims for justice become rhetorical statements. A comparative analysis between Alasdair macintyre’s philosophical proposal and Gregorio Robles’ Communicational Theory of Law.- Part II Language, hermeneutics and Law.- Hermeneutics and the words of law (Law as Communicative Action).- Legal Hermeneutics and Discourse in the Judicial Interpretation.- Theoretic-pragmatic principles for a “rhetoric of agreement”: the concordant function of theoretical art.- Communicational Theory of Law and Text: An analysis from José Ortega y Gasset Theory.- Part III Applied Communicational Theory of Law.- The principle of Human Dignity: empty concept or linguistic expression of an objective reality?.- Can motherhood be promised? Immoral promises, surrogate gestation, and law as a performative act in Reinach’s work.- Semantic and Rhetoric regarding the understanding of the Constitution.- Shariah through the Lens of Communicational Theory of Law: Is it a Legal Order?.- What does it mean to be transparent? Semiotic analysis of the semantic and pragmatic implications of the term "transparency".- PART IV Law, Communication and AI.- AI and Communicational theory of law.- Technological singularity and personal identity. Reflections for an ethical-legal debate.- Law and communication in the age of Metaverse.- New instruments to think and decide. The last word in the “algo-cratic” era and human leadership in the “algor-ethical” context: what Law?.