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Towards AI formalisms for legal evidence

1997
The discipline or artificial intelligence for law, for all its accomplishments, e.g., in modelling argumentation has generally not dealt with legal evidence. For the latter domain formalization was developped, instead, in forensic statitics, as well as in jury modelling.
Ephraim Nissan, Daniel Rousseau
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Formal models of coherence and legal epistemology

Artificial Intelligence and Law, 2007
This paper argues that formal models of coherence are useful for constructing a legal epistemology. Two main formal approaches to coherence are examined: coherence-based models of belief revision and the theory of coherence as constraint satisfaction.
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The rise of legal formalism; or the defences of legal faith

Legal Studies, 1983
‘Just as in religion, so long as there is a religion, there must be a dogmatic theology, which cannot be replaced by any religious psychology or sociology, so, as long as there is a law, there must be a normative theory of law.’ H. KelsenIn terms of the history of the social sciences, the latter quarter of the nineteenth century was characterised in no
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‘Legal Formalism’ and Western legal thought*

Jurisprudence, 2023
Karlson Preuss
exaly  

Legal Formality

The Journal of Legal Studies, 1973
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Formal and Informal in Legal Logic

2010
The label “legal logic” is ambiguous. It can be used as referring either to applications of standard formal logic (including, for example, modal or deontic logic) or to various patterns of arguments used by lawyers. This ambiguity corresponds to the double meaning of “logic”, understood narrowly or largely.
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