Alfred Schutz and the Autrian schools of jurisprudence and economics

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Abstract

Alfred Schutz, before entering in contact with phenomenology, was a student of law with Hans Kelsen and of economics with Ludwig von Mises. What Schutz thought they both lacked was a clear-cut consciousness of the methodological procedures that would allow them to build their respective sciences, jurisprudence and economics. In the wake of Max Weber’s distinction between subjective and objective meaning, Schutz thought that both social scientists had been able to find out the domains of invariance of legal and of economic acts, i.e., acts that pertain to the domain of the two sciences. That is where he thought that the contribution of phenomenology was indispensable; first, to disclose how juridical and economical typical acts are grounded in pre-scientific typifications of the world of human interactions; secondly, to show that the social scientists must resort to processes of idealization, such as the ones described by Husserl (namely, in Formal and Transcendental Logic) to grasp the main concepts of their sciences.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationPhenomenology of law and normativity
EditorsPanos Theodorou, Pedro Manuel Santos Alves, Anna Irene Baka
Place of PublicationCham
PublisherSpringer
Pages249-268
Number of pages20
Edition1
ISBN (Electronic)9783031687051
ISBN (Print)9783031687044
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2024

Publication series

NameContributions to Phenomenology
PublisherSpringer Cham
Volume133
ISSN (Print)0923-9545
ISSN (Electronic)2215-1915

Keywords

  • Idealizations
  • Phenomenology
  • Social acts
  • Subjective and objective meaning

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