: Adolf Reinach, John Crosby
: The Apriori Foundations of the Civil Law Along with the lecture 'Concerning Phenomenology'
: Walter de Gruyter GmbH& Co.KG
: 9783110329803
: Realistische Phänomenologie / Realist Phenomenology
: 1
: CHF 137.60
:
: 20. und 21. Jahrhundert
: English
: 228
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF
The phenomenologists were concerned to show that essential structures of being, knowable by rational insight, are found far more abundantly than is commonly thought. In his great monograph Reinach shows that in the civil law, where one usually thinks that there are only legal structures of human devising, there are in fact many essential structures, such as the structure of promising or of owning. These pre-positive structures, which are something different from the moral norms relevant to the positive law, provide the civil law with a foundation that can be known by philosophical insight. Though the enactments of the civil law are changeable, these essential foundations are not changeable. Of particular significance and originality is Reinach's concept of a social act, that is, of an act that addresses another and has to be heard by the other in order to be complete. Reinach shows that the essence of legally relevant acts such as promising, comes to evidence when they are understood as social acts. The concept of a social act, in fact, has significance far beyond the part of legal philosophy in which Reinach first discovers it.

Introduction to the Reprint7
Foreword to the Reprint9
A Brief Biography ofReinach12
Reinach as Philosophical Personality15
Edmund Husserl15
Dietrich von Hildebrand19
Edith Stein31
Hedwig Conrad-Martius34
The Apriori Foundations of the Civil Law37
Concerning Phenomenology179
Appendix: “Speech Act Theory and Phenomenology”203