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(1999) Selected papers in legal philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer.

Directive discourse

Kazimierz Opałek

pp. 295-310

The vast field of directive discourse is as a rule studied but in a fragmentary way, attention being mostly paid to such kinds of directives only as legal and moral norms. Their caracterization is usually supplemented in the textbooks by some general — and vague — references to the so-called norms of custom, or customary rules1. Considerations on norms of social organizations other than the State are not much advanced2, analyses of rules of games are conducted rather in the mode of constructing some model-exemplifications, as it is the case with the study of the game of chess, favoured by some scholars3. Many other types of directives in current use do not awaken sufficient interest, undoubtedly because of the absence of adequate practical grounds for their investigation.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-9257-4_19

Full citation:

Opałek, K. (1999)., Directive discourse, in K. Opałek, Selected papers in legal philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 295-310.

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