Legal classification and judicial syllogism

Particularly in criminal matters, the judicial errors register an alarming increase, so much so that it not only affects the destiny of the wrongfully sentenced or the groups that they belong to, but also the destiny of the entire society. A cause of this situation resides, from what it seems, in th...

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Main Author: Mioara-Ketty Guiu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bucharest University of Economic Studies 2018-10-01
Series:Juridical Tribune
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.tribunajuridica.eu/arhiva/An8vS/11.%20Mioara-Ketty%20Guiu.pdf
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spelling doaj-db065229a37e46d4b8f4f10e7a8562902020-11-24T22:16:19ZengBucharest University of Economic StudiesJuridical Tribune2247-71952248-03822018-10-018Special139147Legal classification and judicial syllogismMioara-Ketty Guiu0 the “Acad. Andrei Radulescu” Legal Research Institute of the Romanian AcademyParticularly in criminal matters, the judicial errors register an alarming increase, so much so that it not only affects the destiny of the wrongfully sentenced or the groups that they belong to, but also the destiny of the entire society. A cause of this situation resides, from what it seems, in the lack of thorough legal studies with regards to the logical operations which should stand at the base of the decision that an actual act does constitute a certain offence, with a well specified “classification” or “qualification”. The present paper tries to actuate debates on the matter, which has been wrongfully neglected. With this purpose, the author begins from a rather old idea, but insufficiently known, and that is that any court sentence is the result of two types of judicial syllogisms: qualificative and decisional. Elaborating this idea, the author observes a series of other aspects, such as: the fact that, in criminal matters, the qualificative syllogisms serve to establish the legal classification, while the decisional syllogisms serve to establish the sentence; the fact that, in criminal qualificative syllogisms, the subject is always the actual act, and the predicate is a criminal concept (the notion of an offence); the fact that the legal classification is not an “operation”, as is claimed by many authors, but a conclusion, specifically to a qualificative syllogism etc.http://www.tribunajuridica.eu/arhiva/An8vS/11.%20Mioara-Ketty%20Guiu.pdfactual actact-speciesconceptsyllogismjudicial error
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mioara-Ketty Guiu
spellingShingle Mioara-Ketty Guiu
Legal classification and judicial syllogism
Juridical Tribune
actual act
act-species
concept
syllogism
judicial error
author_facet Mioara-Ketty Guiu
author_sort Mioara-Ketty Guiu
title Legal classification and judicial syllogism
title_short Legal classification and judicial syllogism
title_full Legal classification and judicial syllogism
title_fullStr Legal classification and judicial syllogism
title_full_unstemmed Legal classification and judicial syllogism
title_sort legal classification and judicial syllogism
publisher Bucharest University of Economic Studies
series Juridical Tribune
issn 2247-7195
2248-0382
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Particularly in criminal matters, the judicial errors register an alarming increase, so much so that it not only affects the destiny of the wrongfully sentenced or the groups that they belong to, but also the destiny of the entire society. A cause of this situation resides, from what it seems, in the lack of thorough legal studies with regards to the logical operations which should stand at the base of the decision that an actual act does constitute a certain offence, with a well specified “classification” or “qualification”. The present paper tries to actuate debates on the matter, which has been wrongfully neglected. With this purpose, the author begins from a rather old idea, but insufficiently known, and that is that any court sentence is the result of two types of judicial syllogisms: qualificative and decisional. Elaborating this idea, the author observes a series of other aspects, such as: the fact that, in criminal matters, the qualificative syllogisms serve to establish the legal classification, while the decisional syllogisms serve to establish the sentence; the fact that, in criminal qualificative syllogisms, the subject is always the actual act, and the predicate is a criminal concept (the notion of an offence); the fact that the legal classification is not an “operation”, as is claimed by many authors, but a conclusion, specifically to a qualificative syllogism etc.
topic actual act
act-species
concept
syllogism
judicial error
url http://www.tribunajuridica.eu/arhiva/An8vS/11.%20Mioara-Ketty%20Guiu.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT mioarakettyguiu legalclassificationandjudicialsyllogism
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