Conversational Implicatures and Legal Interpretation

On the Difference between Conversational Maxims and Legal Interpretative Criteria

Authors

  • Francesca Poggi Law dpt. “Cesare Beccara”, University of Milan

Keywords:

Legal interpretation, conversational implicatures, interpretative criteria, Paul Grice, law

Abstract

Currently, there is an ongoing debate which involves legal scholars, as well as philosophers of language and pragmatists, about the applicability of Grice’s theory of conversational implicatures to legal statutes, i.e. about the possibility of interpreting legal statutes according to Grice’s conversational maxims (or maxims that are similar to Grice’s ones). The aim of this paper is twofold: first, to provide a clear reconstruction of the debate at stake; second, to advance an argument within that debate. After a brief presentation of Grice’s theory (§2), I will examine the arguments that have been advanced in favour of and against the possibility of interpreting legal statutes according to Grice’s model (§3), and then I will argue that the dispute should be engaged on a factual level. My thesis is that even if some legal interpretative criteria have a content similar to that of conversational maxims, their functioning is totally different, because they are not based on the existence of a mutual general expectation.

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Published

2019-01-23

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Section

Essays