Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Jurisprudence and Necessity

View through CrossRef
Much of the work in contemporary jurisprudence is done on the assumption that legal philosophy should find the set of necessary and sufficient conditions that something must have in order to count as law. This essay challenges this view. It examines in detail two versions of this view: the first is the view that jurisprudence should find the necessary features of law and then, from among them, those that are “important” for understanding law. I argue that these two features are in tension with each other, and that there are good reasons for thinking that an account that tries to discover the important features about law will not limit itself only to those features that all laws necessarily possess. The second version is one that tries to discover what necessarily belongs to “our” concept (or practice) of law by looking at those features that participants in the practice of law deem most important about it. I argue that this argument is indeterminate because it has no non-circular standard of defining what belongs to “our” concept of law. I then offer an alternative role for jurisprudence that focuses on trying to solve certain puzzles about law, such as explaining how a social practice can create binding norms. Answering questions of legal philosophy does not require finding what features all laws necessarily possess while maintaining a role for jurisprudence alongside other interdisciplinary approaches to law.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Jurisprudence and Necessity
Description:
Much of the work in contemporary jurisprudence is done on the assumption that legal philosophy should find the set of necessary and sufficient conditions that something must have in order to count as law.
This essay challenges this view.
It examines in detail two versions of this view: the first is the view that jurisprudence should find the necessary features of law and then, from among them, those that are “important” for understanding law.
I argue that these two features are in tension with each other, and that there are good reasons for thinking that an account that tries to discover the important features about law will not limit itself only to those features that all laws necessarily possess.
The second version is one that tries to discover what necessarily belongs to “our” concept (or practice) of law by looking at those features that participants in the practice of law deem most important about it.
I argue that this argument is indeterminate because it has no non-circular standard of defining what belongs to “our” concept of law.
I then offer an alternative role for jurisprudence that focuses on trying to solve certain puzzles about law, such as explaining how a social practice can create binding norms.
Answering questions of legal philosophy does not require finding what features all laws necessarily possess while maintaining a role for jurisprudence alongside other interdisciplinary approaches to law.

Related Results

The Existence of African Jurisprudence: An Audit of Life Experience of Precolonial Anlo Traditional Society
The Existence of African Jurisprudence: An Audit of Life Experience of Precolonial Anlo Traditional Society
There is a controversy about the nonexistence of African Jurisprudence fueled by a jurisprudential school of thought known as the Skeptic school of thought on African Jurisprudence...
The Province of Jurisprudence Contested
The Province of Jurisprudence Contested
Allan Hutchinson’s recent book, The Province of Jurisprudence Democratized, is regarded as presenting the opportunity for considering what is involved in seeking to establish the p...
Imam Al-Shafi’i: The Founder of Islamic Law
Imam Al-Shafi’i: The Founder of Islamic Law
Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Idrees Al-shafi'i is a theologian and renowned Islamic Scholar, who was the first contributor of the principles of Islamic Jurisprudence. He was a famous ...
Natural Type of Law Understanding as Jurisprudence Activity Based Theory Basis
Natural Type of Law Understanding as Jurisprudence Activity Based Theory Basis
The article is devoted to the the natural law school certain provisions coverage indicating its connection with the activity based approach in jurisprudence and is the basis for th...
Making Sense of Minor Jurisprudence
Making Sense of Minor Jurisprudence
This essay attempts to understand ‘Minor Jurisprudence’, to articulate some of its senses and resonances. It does so, first, by looking into the emergence of ‘Minor Jurisprudence’ ...
PENGARUH YURISPRUDENSI TERHADAP PRINSIP KEMERDEKAAN HAKIM
PENGARUH YURISPRUDENSI TERHADAP PRINSIP KEMERDEKAAN HAKIM
In the legal system in Indonesia, a jurisprudence is often used in the context of legal discovery. Although theoretically, the Judge is not bound by Jurisprudence, on the other han...
Practical Necessity and Historical Necessity in Historical Materialism
Practical Necessity and Historical Necessity in Historical Materialism
Abstract Practical necessity is shown to play a key role in Marx’s explanation of the historical necessity to which historical materialism is committed and to facili...
Practical Necessity, Freedom, and History
Practical Necessity, Freedom, and History
Abstract By means of careful analysis of relevant writings by Hobbes, Rousseau, Kant, Hegel, and Marx, the author argues that the concept of practical necessity is k...

Back to Top