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    Coordination conventions emerge as solutions to large-sca... — Carmelics
    Home/Democracy & Governance
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    Supports→If the rules of recognition are coordination conventions, it is relatively easy to explain how they may give rise to obligations.

    Coordination conventions emerge as solutions to large-scale and recurrent coordination problems (Lewis 1969).

    Democracy & GovernanceSocial Contract
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    Democracy & GovernanceSocial Contract

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    If the rules of recognition are coordination conventions, it is relatively easy ...If the rules of recognition solve such a coordination problem, they inherit that...Norm subjects have an obligation to solve the coordination problem that gave ris...

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    SEP: lawphil-nature
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    Explaining the rationale of legal authority, however, is not the only component of a theory about the normativity of law. If we hold the legal positivist thesis that law is essentially founded on social conventions, another important question arises here: how can a conventional practice give rise to reasons for action and, in particular, to obligations? Some legal philosophers claimed that conventional rules cannot, by themselves, give rise to obligations. As Leslie Green observed, Hart’s “view

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