Presumption theory in the 16th century.
A study of Jacopo Menochio’s De praesumptionibus (1587)

Based exclusively on primary sources, this study charts the reformulation of judicial proof in the late 16th c. following the introduction of the dualism of artificial/inartificial proofs in Jacopo Menochio’s treatise De praesumptionibus (1587). This study is a textual analysis of the theoretical section of this treatise and of the network of texts recalled by this work.

Although methodologically this is a strictly historical study, it shows the relevance of historical judicial proof (and broadly of the question of fact) to the formation of some basic legal categories (e.g. dualism fact/law, general category of contract, interpretation).

This study is meant to be a contribution to the growing field of historical epistemology.


Above pictured are the three modules of artificial reasoning presented in Petrus Victorius’ Commentary on Aristotle’s Rhetoric (1547). They process either necessary (template 1) or probable signs by abduction (template 2) or by induction (template 3). Jacopo Menochio translates the whole idea to the legal field creating an original methodology of reasoning on facts, which Natural lawyers in turn transmitted to the phase of codifications.

The major doctrines of 16th c. legal science (dualism direct/indirect proofs, distinction law/fact, contract theory, interpretation) are shaped around this rhetorical basis.