
Legal science, or legal dogmatics[1]is a branch of legal studies focussed on the systematic understanding and application of the law. law[2]. Pioneered by scholars such as John Austin and Hans Kelsen, it seeks to examine legal norms and human behaviour through a scientific lens. Kelsen's Pure Theory of Law aimed to create a normative science that analysed legal systems objectively, distinct from political or moral considerations. Although some scholars such as Julius von Kirchmann have questioned the scientific nature of law due to its inherent variability, legal science continues to develop through various approaches, including sociological and analytical perspectives. It emphasises the understanding of legal norms, their relationships and their application, distinguishing itself from legal philosophy and general legal theory. The discipline endeavours to provide a structured and systematic approach to understanding legal structures and their operating mechanisms.
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A science of lawalso called legal dogmaticsis the main one among the legal sciences. In a broad sense, the term refers to the study of law with a view to its application, and, in a narrower sense, to the operation of law in a technological sense, with a view to the so-called "problem of decidability".
The idea of a science of law in its strict sense is usually associated with the legal positivismwhich, based on a distinction between fact e valuewould have sought to exclude or at least diminish the influence of the moral and values in law. In this sense, the science of law would be based on an objective and observable phenomenon and not on relative and subjective values.
The science of law is distinct from philosophy of law, from general theory of law and legal doctrinedisciplines which, despite their methodological rigour, do not depend on observation, verification e falsifiability with explanations based on a scientific theoryThis is the case with the science of law.