שמור ב:
| מחבר ראשי: | |
|---|---|
| פורמט: | Recurso digital |
| שפה: | |
| יצא לאור: |
Zenodo
2026
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| נושאים: | |
| גישה מקוונת: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18400285 |
| תגים: |
הוספת תג
אין תגיות, היה/י הראשונ/ה לתייג את הרשומה!
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תוכן הענינים:
- <p>This preprint proposes a structural reformulation of constitutional adjudication by introducing the “Light–Shadow Principle,” a multi-perspective framework that explains the inherent limitations of single-source legal theories. Building on Hans Kelsen’s Pure Theory of Law, the paper demonstrates that any mono-perspectival normative system inevitably generates blind spots (“shadows”) that cannot be resolved within its own conceptual boundaries.</p> <p>Through a synthesis of legal theory, cognitive science, and systems analysis, the study shows that constitutional reasoning becomes structurally more stable when multiple interpretive perspectives (“light sources”) are integrated. This approach does not negate the contributions of past philosophers or jurists; rather, it situates their insights as partial illuminations within a broader epistemic architecture.</p> <p>The paper argues that contemporary shifts in scholarly communication—such as the increasing acceptance of diverse research formats on platforms like Zenodo, OSF, and SSRN—empirically validate the need for multi-perspective models in legal and philosophical inquiry. By offering a unified structural explanation for both historical limitations and modern institutional changes, the work provides a timely foundation for rethinking constitutional adjudication as a multi-source, dynamically stable system.</p>