The article examines the issue of mutual influence of linguistic philosophy and jurisprudence within the framework of an analytical approach to law. It is indicated that the crisis of classical formal logic in philosophy led to the formation of new approaches to explaining social concepts. The new linguistic methodology has significantly influenced the understanding of law as a social phenomenon and a linguistic phenomenon. The author comes to the conclusion that as a result of this process, at the junction of polemics regarding questions about the performative nature of rules and the relative uncertainty of their content in a changing social context, a theory of legal language arose. This theory has significantly influenced current jurisprudence and largely determined the formation of an analytical tradition in jurisprudence.
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