Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales. FEC-LUZ 
According to the above, the knowledge of law, which is what is 
proposed from its episteme, is reached by different methodological ways. 
If it is about the applicative sense of the legal rule, what is proposed is to 
know it through the interpretation of the act of application; but if we are 
in the second case, the law is known through methodologies that address 
the empirical aspects of obedience or not of the legal rule arisen; that is, 
through  the  interpretation  not  in  the  first  instance  of  the  act  of 
application (or creation), but through the idea of knowing the proto-legal 
action. The truth is that, from both perspectives, strategies of knowledge 
proper  to  this  branch  of  science  are  imposed  on  the  legal  scientist  in 
order to understand it as a social discipline. In the first case, the question 
focuses  on  the  path  of  the  different  interpretations  that  can  be  given 
with  respect to  the legal norm  in its social context. But in  the second 
case, it is about knowing the social actions with respect to the juridical 
norm  on  which  one  interacts.  Let  us  say  some  ideas  about  the  first 
aspect, and leave the second for another opportunity. 
Regarding the interpretation of the act of application of the law, 
knowing the different aspects that arise from such act, implies reaching a 
knowledge  about,  first, the  Law  in  general  sense  (in  all  its  forms  and 
nuances:  Laws,  Decrees,  Regulations,  Treaties,  Ordinances,  etc.),  and 
second,  understanding  the  textual  context  of  the  law  as  a  legal 
phenomenon  embodied  in a  normative  corpus  that  gives  it  shape and 
legal life as such, and second, to understand the textual context of the 
law  as  a  juridical  phenomenon  embodied  in  a  normative  corpus  that 
gives it shape and juridical life as such. In any case, what I am affirming 
is  that  Law  as  an  object  of  study  from  this  sphere  of  social  action 
(through the texts that contain it), is shaped as an object of study that 
must be interpreted in order to reach its meaning; especially when it has 
been  applied  by  some  institutional  decision  that  affects  particular 
citizens.  In  short:  Law  is  text,  and  as  such,  object  of  the  theories  of 
textual interpretation as the aforementioned of the master Betti (2019), 
or  that  of  Gadamer  (1987)  with  whom  the  Italian  master  arduously 
discussed, or of some of the emerging positions for more than 20 years 
about  law  as  argumentation  (Atienza,  2016;  Alexy,  1997;  Habermas, 
2010). 
From the aforementioned perspective, Law as a science deals with 
its object of study through the texts in which it is found as a source of 
knowledge. Law  as a  science aims to  know the  law applied to  specific 
cases,  but  also  from  the  provisions  established  to  prevent  actions