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Friedrich Muller is one of the most important theoretical and constitutional lawyers of the 20th century, whose works are celebrated for their originality and wide reach. Already in the 1960s, Muller noticed the interrelationship between legal dogmatics, legal methodology and the theory of norm. According to Muller, issues present in the legal doctrine originated from methodical problems, which were themselves rooted in flaws from legal norm’s theory. In relation to the latter, Muller tried to develop a new theory of the legal norm, moving from the practice of law. Thus, in the early 1970s, Muller called this new paradigm post-positivist. The main claim is that the normative text is only a preliminary form and for this it is crucial to develop methodologically the passage from the text to the norm. It is realized by the new understanding of the structure of the legal norm, based on two central components: the norm-programme and the normative domain. For this, Friedrich Muller points to some characteristics of the Structuring Legal Theory, defining it as a realistic theory, since it requires contributions from social sciences, especially through the concept of normative domain.
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Friedrich Muller is one of the most important theoretical and constitutional lawyers of the 20th century, whose works are celebrated for their originality and wide reach. Already in the 1960s, Muller noticed the interrelationship between legal dogmatics, legal methodology and the theory of norm. According to Muller, issues present in the legal doctrine originated from methodical problems, which were themselves rooted in flaws from legal norm’s theory. In relation to the latter, Muller tried to develop a new theory of the legal norm, moving from the practice of law. Thus, in the early 1970s, Muller called this new paradigm post-positivist. The main claim is that the normative text is only a preliminary form and for this it is crucial to develop methodologically the passage from the text to the norm. It is realized by the new understanding of the structure of the legal norm, based on two central components: the norm-programme and the normative domain. For this, Friedrich Muller points to some characteristics of the Structuring Legal Theory, defining it as a realistic theory, since it requires contributions from social sciences, especially through the concept of normative domain.