Objectivity and truth are highly contested issues in contemporary Legal
and Moral Philosophy. There are a full range of approaches, from the
very skeptic and pessimistic positions, to the most contemplative and
optimistic conceptions, which defend their possibility not only within
the theoretical but also within the practical thought. Any possible
approach should be diverse enough in order to integrate, among others,
the concepts of facts, existence, justifiability, language, emotions,
disagreement, and a degree of relatedness between law and morals. This
book addresses these topics from various points of view. It is comprised
of a selection of the papers presented at the Second Special Workshop
"Truth and Objectivity in Law and Morals" held at the 27th World
Congress of the IVR in Washington D.C., USA, 2015. The compilation is
divided into four parts that focus on objectivity and truth in law,
legal reasoning, and Kelsen's Theory of Law as well as objectivity and
truth in morals.