Popis: |
Between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, law progressively developed a language of institution of the subject, by the enunciation of a discourse of truth leading to highlighting a properly legal sociability. But, whatever authority/body of truth it may be, law remains however a pragmatic language. The juridical qualification operation implemented by jurists to confront the right to facts also builds a discourse of the plausible intended to capture a real world, imperfect but perfectible by the norm and its binding meaning. The order of the probable affects in return the order of the true. Medieval jurists, producers but also interpreters of this discourse of authority and sociability, constantly oscillate between these two registers, and legitimize by the discourse they produce their capacity to produce this discourse, placing themselves thus at the border between the articulation of the text and its meaning. |