Ontological Grounds of International Law Guzel AZNAGULOVA
International law being a complexly structured, hi-erarchically organized and multi-aspect political and legal phenomenon has dialectical interconnection with universal material and spiritual culture, its past, functioning and devel-opment trends and it has human existence as its deep sensa-tional basis, which represents centuries-old civilized togeth-erness of peoples and nations between them and has specific significance in a specific historical era. Therefore from the cognitive-aware and subject-essential viewpoints internation-al law shall be treated as a form of international relationships, covered by law –i.e. international relationships are the object of regulation of international law and should be considered as a dynamic phenomenon or a consecutive process which rep-resents universal motion principle when its certain status.International law is a dialectical process of a single causal chain of social phenomena which spreads through time and space. The main feature of implementing its basic principles (defined ontologically as universal) relates legally to the field of “oughtness” as a moral onus of subjective will of sover-eign states. It is principally difficult to establish fair interna-tional relationships upon observance of interests of interna-tional relationships subjects as it is impossible to develop a uniform and extensive scale of moral values that are common for all states.
international law, ontology and gnosiology of in-ternational law, state will, public interests, international legal system, principle of dialogue, interaction between interna-tional and national law.
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