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20 June 2024

BOOK: Valentin JEUTNER, The Reasonable Person. A Legal Biography (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024), ISBN 9781009445627

 

(image source: CUP)

Abstract:
Jeutner argues that the reasonable person is, at heart, an empathetic perspective-taking device, by tracing the standard of the reasonable person across time, legal fields and countries. Beginning with a review of imaginary legal figures in the legal systems of ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome, the book explains why the common law's reasonable person emerged amidst the British industrialisation under the influence of Scottish Enlightenment thinking. Following the figure into colonial courts, onto battlefields and into self-driving cars, the book contends that the reasonable person invites judges, jury-members, and lawyers to take another person's perspective when assessing their own or another person's conduct. The perspective of another is taken by means of empathy, by feeling what others might feel in a particular situation. Thus construed, the figure of the reasonable person can help us make more accurate judgments in a diverse world.

Table of contents:

Table of Contents - Introduction - The Reasonable Person in the Past - The Reasonable Person in Birmingham - The Reasonable Person in Clapham - The Reasonable Person in the Colonies - The Reasonable Person in the Battlefield - The Reasonable Person in the Future-  Conclusion Bibliography Index. 

On the author:

Valentin Jeutner is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law, Lund University and Senior Retained Lecturer, Pembroke College, Oxford. Jeutner encountered the reasonable person when studying law in England (Oxford/Cambridge) and the US (Georgetown). He is also admitted to the bar of New York State. Previous publications include Irresolvable Norm Conflicts in International Law (2017) and [l]ex machina (2020). 

Read more on Cambridge Core: DOI 10.1017/9781009445672.




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