Vincent Luizzi

Vincent Luizzi is an American philosopher and Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Texas State University (1976-2022).[1] He is known for his expertise in legal ethics and philosophy of law.[2] Luizzi was longtime Chair of Philosophy at Texas State University (1982-2014). A member of the State Bar of Texas, he served as a municipal judge in San Marcos, Texas[3][4][5] and as a magistrate in and for the State of Texas, 1983-2018.

Vincent Luizzi
Born1948
Endicott, NY
EducationUniversity of Pennsylvania (Ph.D.)
University of Rochester (A.B.)
Boston University School of Law (J.D.)
SpouseJames Shew
AwardsFulbright Specialist in Law (South Africa and Bosnia), Special Award of International Society for Universalism, Phi Beta Kappa
Era21st century Philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolAnalytic and Pragmatism
InstitutionsTexas State University
ThesisA Naturalistic Theory of Justice: A Critique of C. I. Lewis' Ethics (1973)
Doctoral advisorElizabeth Flower
Main interests
philosophy of law and legal ethics
Notable ideas
Developed general approach to ethics from legal ethics; and to jurisprudence (regarding law, judging, and punishment), from a study of people’s courts, in each case moving from a seemingly restricted field to one with general or universal significance.

Books

  • Appeal to the People’s Court: Rethinking Law, Adjudication, and Punishment, Brill, 2018.
  • New and Old World Philosophy, with Audrey McKinney, Prentice Hall, 2001
  • A Case for Legal Ethics: Legal Ethics as a Source for a Universal Ethic, with a foreword by John R. Silber, State University of New York Press, 1993.
  • A Naturalistic Theory of Justice: Critical Commentary and Readings on C.I. Lewis's Ethics, University Press of America, 1981.

References


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