Cognition of the Law: Toward a Cognitive Sociology of Law and Behavior

Cham: Springer Verlag (2018)
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Abstract

This book’s basic hypothesis – which it proposes to test with a cognitive-sociological approach – is that legal behavior, like every form of human behavior, is directed and framed by biosocial constraints that are neither entirely genetic nor exclusively cultural. As such, from a sociological perspective the law can be seen as a super-meme, that is, as a biosocial constraint that develops only in complex societies. This super-meme theory, by highlighting a fundamental distinction between defensive and assertive biases, might explain the false contradiction between law as a static and historical phenomenon, and law as a dynamic and promotional element. Socio-legal scholars today have to face the challenge of pursuing a truly interdisciplinary approach, connecting all the fields that can contribute to building a modern theory of normative behavior and social action. Understanding and framing concepts such as rationality, emotion, or justice can help to overcome the significant divide between micro and macro sociological knowledge. Social scientists who are interested in the law must be able to master the epistemological discourses of different disciplines, and to produce fruitful syntheses and bridge-operations so as to understand the legal phenomenon from each different point of view. The book adopts four perspectives: sociological, psychological, biological-evolutionary and cognitive. All of them have the potential to be mutually integrated, and constitute that general social science that provides common ground for exchange. The goal is to arrive at a broad and integrated view of the socio-legal phenomenon, paving the way for a comprehensive theory of norm-oriented and norm-perceived actions.

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Chapters

Conclusion

In this work I argued that if sociology and the sociology of law do not take the other disciplines seriously into account, they risk losing their scientific utility. The social sciences, whenever they remain in isolation, find it increasingly difficult to formulate plausible predictions or explanati... see more

Cognition and the Law

With the demise of nineteenth-century behavioral mechanicism came the need to chart a new course in the effort to work toward a modern theory of behavior, and so also of law-oriented behavior, and it was the whole set of mentalist and behaviorist conceptions that pointed the way forward. Ever since ... see more

Nature, Evolution, and Law

If we can draw a preliminary conclusion from the previous chapters, it is that sociological theory and the social sciences in general have not yet articulated or proposed in a convincing and organic way a theory of the motives of human behavior that can adequately explain the legal phenomenon. In pa... see more

The Psychic Subject as a Legal Actor

Law and psychology are disciplines that live in separate wings of the same palace. Both share the goal of predicting and controlling human behavior. However, the law relies necessarily, though often unknowingly or naively, on psychological theories and paradigms it cannot do without. With regard to ... see more

The Social Subject as a Legal Actor

Sociologists who deal with legal phenomena often live a paradox and an internal contradiction that they are not always able to admit or to identify or resolve. This is especially true of holistic approaches to socio-legal studies, for which the individual is in some way, at different levels of depth... see more

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