The Limits of Law and Morality: A Perspective From the Krausist Philosophy of Law

Keywords: law, morality, philosophy, Krausism, iusnaturalism
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Abstract

In this article we present a dissertation on the limits of law and morality, a topic of supreme importance for the Philosophy of Law and the real cape horn or the storms of Science and Legal Philosophy, where so many systems, when trying to overcome it and perhaps save the previous ones, have been shipwrecked. Our aim is to expose the historical development of this relationship from ancient, medieval and modern age, to give an account of how the Krausist legal philosophy was interwoven in this context and how it has given answers that have left interesting results of great validity in the field of legal philosophy. Finally, we expose some of the topics that the philosophy of law opened to the juridical discussions of its time, and which were enormously original and precursors of what still is being debated today in the areas of Philosophy of Law and Political Philosophy.

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Author Biography

Delia María Manzanero Fernández, University Rey Juan Carlos
Department of Education Sciences, Language, Culture and Arts, Historical-Legal and Humanistic Sciences and Modern Languages, Faculty of CC. Legal and Social.
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Published
2019-01-29
How to Cite
Manzanero Fernández D. M. (2019). The Limits of Law and Morality: A Perspective From the Krausist Philosophy of Law. Las Torres de Lucca. International Journal of Political Philosophy, 8(14), 135-158. https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/LTDL/article/view/76809