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2013 | 2(13) | 123-143

Article title

Czy każdy sędzia powinien być szachistą?

Content

Title variants

EN
Should every judge be a chess player?

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
The principal objective of this article is to present the issue of intuition in the judge’s work. The paper limits its scope strictly to the private law cases. There are two different ways of perceiving the judge’s decisions: the first one sees the decision-making processas a procedure based purely on the provisions of the civil procedure, while the other considers it a process of more psychological nature. Confronting the two standpoints has led to an interesting conclusion: the influence of psychological aspects on the process of decision-making is clearly unavoidable. Therefore, it is useful to recognise the impact of psychology on a judge’s work, keeping in mind that many researchers have provided conclusions on decision-making process, notably, Gary Klein who established that intuition has no “magical” nature but is purely a result of the long accrued experience.

Keywords

Contributors

  • Krakowska Akademia im. Andrzeja Frycza Modrzewskiego

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.mhp-ac6ff634-2d3c-43c6-8c2d-d4ad016f6898
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