Abstract
The article is a review of Hauke Brunkhorst’s book on a Critical Theory of Legal Revolutions. The author addresses three points: (1) Hauke Brunkhorst’s notion of history, and of what remains unseen; (2) the dialectics of evolution and revolution, and whether the approach is sufficiently dialectic, according to its own promise; and (3) the (too) implicit notion of critique.
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