Abstract
In his book “Making the Case”, Paul Kahn establishes the intimate connection -in American legal culture- between popular sovereignty and court rulings. Court ruling’s theoretical work has been focused on identifying which are the milestone judgements and the elements that represent them. However, the examination of judicial virtues has been left aside. This text proposes a new way of looking at judicial decisions, based on essential virtues that make a judge an exemplary one. For this discussion, the author begins indicating the distinct characteristics of the exemplary judges in order to analyze the function of this judges on legal culture. Within these parameters, the text presents a debate about judicial subjectivity and hence, its effects on legal culture. Finally, the text presents an analysis for the judicial exemplariness as an useful concept for the solution of problems within the theory of law and contrasts its findings with Paul Kahn’s conclusions about judicial authority.