Extensive interpretation of legal provisions is in tension with the prohibition of reasoning by analogy in criminal law, for it is unclear what the di erence is between the two. Some scholars claim that they di er from a theoretical point of view, since they do not have the same argumentative structure. On the other hand, the two come to the same result starting from the same legal materials: they justify the extension of a regulation to a case that is not explicitly considered by the law. e paper deals with this issue discussing a recent Italian case (the “Vatican Radio case”) and proposes an account of the distinction between the two based upon the principle of semantic tolerance and its inferential structure in legal argumentation
Analogical reasoning and extensive interpretation
Canale, Damiano;Tuzet, Giovanni
2017
Abstract
Extensive interpretation of legal provisions is in tension with the prohibition of reasoning by analogy in criminal law, for it is unclear what the di erence is between the two. Some scholars claim that they di er from a theoretical point of view, since they do not have the same argumentative structure. On the other hand, the two come to the same result starting from the same legal materials: they justify the extension of a regulation to a case that is not explicitly considered by the law. e paper deals with this issue discussing a recent Italian case (the “Vatican Radio case”) and proposes an account of the distinction between the two based upon the principle of semantic tolerance and its inferential structure in legal argumentationFile | Dimensione | Formato | |
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