na INLIS000000000009374 20221028124523 0010-0520009374 221028 | | eng 978-0674013605 eng 340.1 340.1 POS f Posner, Richard A Frontiers of Legal Theory / Richard A. Posner Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 2001 vi, 453 p. ; 24 cm. The most exciting development in legal thinking since World War II has been the growth of interdisciplinary legal studies--the application of the social sciences and the humanities to law in the hope of making law less formalistic, more practical, better grounded empirically, bettered tailored to social goals. Judge Richard A. Posner has been a leader in this movement, and his new book explores its rapidly expanding frontier. The book examines five principal areas or directions of interdisciplinary study: economics, history, psychology, the epistemology of law and the empirical study of law. These approaches are seen to interpenetrate and to compose a coherent body of legal theory--a unified framework for understanding such seemingly disparate phenomena as the economics of free speech, the intellectual history of economic analysis of law, the relation between income and liberty, the law of possession, the psychology of legal decisionmaking, the role of emotion in law, and the use of citation analysis to evaluate judges and law professors. The book carries on Posner's project of analyzing the law as an institution of social governance. Jurisprudence; Sociological jurisprudence; Law--Philosophy. Law and economics; History--Philosophy; Psychology--Philosophy. 22451/MKRI-P/XI-2011 22452/MKRI-P/XI-2011 22452/MKRI-P/XI-2011 22451/MKRI-P/XI-2011 22451/MKRI-P/XI-2011 22452/MKRI-P/XI-2011