An experimental guide to vehicles in the park
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/64465Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Soc Judgment & Decision Macking
Materia
Experimental jurisprudence The concept of law Rules Legal psychology Hart Fuller
Fecha
2020-04-14Referencia bibliográfica
Struchiner, Noel and Hannikainen, Ivar and Almeida, Guilherme, An Experimental Guide to Vehicles in the Park (April 14, 2020). Judgment and Decision Making, Vol. 15, No. 3, May 2020, Forthcoming , [Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3576159]
Patrocinador
National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq); Carlos Chagas Filho Foundation for Research Support of the State of Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ)Resumen
Prescriptive rules guide human behavior across various domains of community life, including law, morality, and etiquette.
What, specifically, are rules in the eyes of their subjects, i.e., those who are expected to abide by them? Over the last sixty
years, theorists in the philosophy of law have offered a useful framework with which to consider this question. Some, following
H. L. A. Hart, argue that a rule’s text at least sometimes suffices to determine whether the rule itself covers a case. Others,
in the spirit of Lon Fuller, believe that there is no way to understand a rule without invoking its purpose — the benevolent
ends which it is meant to advance. In this paper we ask whether people associate rules with their textual formulation or their
underlying purpose. We find that both text and purpose guide people’s reasoning about the scope of a rule. Overall, a rule’s
text more strongly contributed to rule infraction decisions than did its purpose. The balance of these considerations, however,
varied across experimental conditions: In conditions favoring a spontaneous judgment, rule interpretation was affected by
moral purposes, whereas analytic conditions resulted in a greater adherence to textual interpretations. In sum, our findings
suggest that the philosophical debate between textualism and purposivism partly reflects two broader approaches to normative
reasoning that vary within and across individuals.