Legal Positivism Defined ‘ the belief in a strict separation should be maintained between the law as it is, and the law as it ought to be. The task of.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Zina OLeary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage Chapter 1 Taking the Leap into the Research World Zina OLeary.
Advertisements

Major Principles of the Constitution
Concept of Law and Sources of Law
Natural Law, Positive Law, and Legal Realism
What Is Philosophy?. The Definition: Philosophy is… a study of ideas about human nature in relation to the reality in which we live. a study of ideas.
Legal Positivism Two Central Theses Broad and Narrow Positivism
Legal Positivism Austin, Kelsen, Hart. Legal Positivism Per genus et differentium What is law All law is traceable to a (single) source Legal Validity.
Republican a state in which supreme power is held by the people and their elected representatives, and which has an elected or nominated president rather.
1 From metaphysics to logical positivism The metaphysician tells us that empirical truth-conditions [for metaphysical terms] cannot be specified; if he.
POSITIVE LAW. Imagine a powerful sovereign who issues commands to his or her subjects. They are under a duty to comply with his wishes. The notion of.
NORBERT ELIAS What is Sociology? Chapters One and Two.
Normative Versions of Legal Positivism H. L. A. Hart (Oxford) H. L. A. Hart (Oxford) Hans Kelsen (Vienna, UCLA) Hans Kelsen (Vienna, UCLA)
Agenda Foundational Questions about Research Elements of Theory Sources and Evaluation of Definitions Meta-Theories.
Major Meta Theory Schools: The Positivists Positivists: generalizations apart from observable reality considered unacceptable Logical Positivism: statements.
Principles of Government
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) Questions
Philosophy A philosophy is a system of beliefs about reality.
What is positive law? The Command Theory (Bentham, Austin)
Introduction to Law. True human goodness, in all its purity and freedom, can come to the fore only when its recipient has no power. Milan Kundera, Czech.
The Conservative Reaction
Auguste Comte and Early Positivism
Philosophical Origins of Psychology Empiricism The pursuit of knowledge through the observation of nature and the attribution of all knowledge to experience.
“Interpreting” the law
Sources of Law Chapter 5. Introduction American legal system is based on English law  Colonists who first came to the US were governed by the English.
Introduction Politics and government matter.
Chapter Three Laws: Their Sources. Constitutional Law The federal government and each state have constitutions. Constitutions are documents whose primary.
Unit 4 Constitution and Government U.S. History Key Terms Name:
Jeremy Bentham Legal Philosopher Lauren Khalil & Ciara Hanley.
Theories and Concepts of Law continued Positive Law Law is simply what political authorities or lawmakers command It is based upon human reason and authority.
Foundations of American Government Principles of Government
Intro to Law “Laws are like sausages, it’s better to not see them being made”- Bismarck.
UI 305: Judicial Reasoning Prof. H. Hamner Hill Spring 2015.
Bernard D’ Sami.  S may be defined as the power of the State to make law and enforce the law with all the coercive power it cares to employ. It is ‘that.
Meta-Ethics Emotivism. Normative Ethics Meta-ethics Subject matter is moral issues such as abortion, war, euthanasia etc Provides theories or frameworks.
The Constitution Six Basic Principles of the Constitution.
Rachel Petrik Based on writing by A.J. Ayer
John Locke. Philosophical Liberalism One of the foundational ideas of liberalism is the idea of tolerance.
7 Principles of the Constitution How Does the Constitution Work??
Aim: What are the six basic principles of our Constitution? Do Now: What are values and principles? What are three principles or ideas that you would base.
Unit 1 The Concept of Law. What is a Commonplace?  The set of everyday truths about a given subject matter providing us a shared subject matter for inquiry.
What Is Philosophy?. The Definition: Philosophy is… a study of ideas about human nature in relation to the reality in which we live. a study of ideas.
Analytical School of law
Constructivism in IR Theory Prepared for Junior Int'l Politics class at NENU, Fall 2015 “Introducing the IR Paradigms: 3”
PHILOSOPHIES OF LAW NATURAL LAW, POSITIVE LAW, AND OTHER PERSPECTIVES.
The Enlightenment The Enlightenment A response to economic and political changes in European society Secular world view  focused on man’s.
J.S. Mill Jeremy Bentham. Utilitarianism “The creed which accepts as the foundation of morals, utility, or the greatest happiness principle, holds that.
Jeremy Bentham & John Austin. Jeremy Bentham… was an english philosopher and political radical was an english philosopher and political radical best known.
Section 1.1 The Foundations of Law Section 1.1 The Foundations of Law Morality refers to a society’s values and beliefs about right and wrong. Ethics.
Definitions Six Basic Principles Formal Amendments True or False Informal Procedures $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $ 500$500.
USHC 1.2 Foundations of Representative Government.
JUDGING and the NATURE OF JUSTICE. “It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.” Aristotle.
Empeiria and Positus M urat B aç Boğaziçi University Philosophy Department.
7 TH GRADE SOCIAL STUDIES CIVICS UNIT NOTES BY: MR. BABCOCK The Six Basic Principles of American Government.
The philosophy of Ayn Rand…. Objectivism Ayn Rand is quoted as saying, “I had to originate a philosophical framework of my own, because my basic view.
Some Philosophical Orientations of Educational Research You Do What You Think, I Think.
CHAPTER 1: LAW: PURPOSES AND SOURCES. Chapter 12 Learning Objectives: Definitions and Classifications of Law Sources of Law Case Law: Role of Precedent.
USA: US Supreme Court and civil rights Key terms
Sovereignty –Monistic Theory
The US Government and The Principles of the United States Constitution
Colonial influences on the Constitution
Theories and Concepts of Law continued Positive Law
Jurisprudence.
Bentham’s Utilitarianism
LEGAL PHILOSOPHY DISCUSSION CLASS
JUDGING and the NATURE OF JUSTICE
Separation of Powers: powers of the government are spread among 3 different branches of government
Philosophers Influential on the US Constitution
Principles of the Constitution
Analytical School of law
SOVEREIGNTY The principle of absolute and unlimited power
Presentation transcript:

Legal Positivism Defined ‘ the belief in a strict separation should be maintained between the law as it is, and the law as it ought to be. The task of courts, then is to pronounce the law, as found in legislative texts and previous court decisions, and not to pronounce on questions of political morality ’ – Henk Botha

Positivist Approaches To Law Reject Metaphysics Epistemology: Strictly Empiricist that are observable Law as a human construct: versus the natural law approach which suggest that law is controlled by a set of metaphysical rules. Also the social thesis of law ties in with this, because it supports the idea that law is a social fact. ‘ what the law is in no way depends on what it should be ’ Command theory: law is a set of commands that are formed by the will of the sovereign state. (command v rule)

Positivism’s three themes: –Epistemological: theory of knowledge Empiricism: only observable facts (sensory perception) –Social: law as a social fact –Command: law as a set of commands

Austin and Bentham They did away with the natural-law tradition. They believed in a supreme legislature, command theory as the nature of law and utility as the measure of good law. What can be empirically established is that humans felt pain and pleasure Pre-political or natural rights lacked an empirical or factual foundation, therefore could not serve as the foundation of law. How would they have felt about our Constitution then?

Positivism v Natural Law Product of human action Nature in control of man Idea of good life shared by all Morals are laws Result of metaphysical ‘ rules ’ Man can control nature through an understanding of science. The question about what is good and what not is not for the courts to decide. Law and morals are seperated.

Austin and Bentham v Hart Command External aspect Validity from the will of the supreme state power. They both believed that the law was a set of commands, and not a system of rules. They saw law as the expression of the political power of the sovereign. Parliamentary sovereignty Rule Internal aspect The validity of a legal rule to another legal rule. Law is a system in which rules control everybody in the state, including those who hold power. ‘ rule of law ’ Cosntitutionalism