← Back to Search

PYTHEN: A Flexible Framework for Legal Reasoning in Python

☆☆☆☆☆Mar 16, 2026arxiv →

Ha-Thanh Nguyen, Ken Satoh

Abstract

This paper introduces PYTHEN, a novel Python-based framework for defeasible legal reasoning. PYTHEN is designed to model the inherently defeasible nature of legal argumentation, providing a flexible and intuitive syntax for representing legal rules, conditions, and exceptions. Inspired by PROLEG (PROlog-based LEGal reasoning support system) and guided by the philosophy of The Zen of Python, PYTHEN leverages Python's built-in any() and all() functions to offer enhanced flexibility by natively supporting both conjunctive (ALL) and disjunctive (ANY) conditions within a single rule, as well as a more expressive exception-handling mechanism. This paper details the architecture of PYTHEN, provides a comparative analysis with PROLEG, and discusses its potential applications in autoformalization and the development of next-generation legal AI systems. By bridging the gap between symbolic reasoning and the accessibility of Python, PYTHEN aims to democratize formal legal reasoning for young researchers, legal tech developers, and professionals without extensive logic programming expertise. We position PYTHEN as a practical bridge between the powerful symbolic reasoning capabilities of logic programming and the rich, ubiquitous ecosystem of Python, making formal legal reasoning accessible to a broader range of developers and legal professionals.

Explain this paper

Ask this paper

Loading chat…

Rate this paper