International law was a subject of interest for philosophers from the early modern period to the Enlightenment - from the Spanish Scholastics and Grotius to Christian Wolff and Immanuel Kant. With a few exceptions (most notably Jeremy Bentham and Hans Kelsen), however, it has not been a principal object of philosophical inquiry for much of the last two centuries. Why?.
CITATION STYLE
Verdirame, G. (2020). International law. In The Cambridge Companion to the Philosophy of Law (pp. 389–408). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.7312/swin90046-020
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