Well, when you say you see your claims regarding the application of this higher law reflected in the American legal system, you might expect those claims will be addressed--by me at least — Ciceronianus the White
The belief that the law must conform to an "assumed standard" of some kind, and isn't the law if it does not, ignores the law; it doesn't explain it. It leads to a fundamental ignorance of the nature of the law and its operation.
What say you to that, if anything?
I say: There is no Law but the Law! — Ciceronianus the White
Some passages from Wiki on natural law:I'm not sure just what Natural Law is, myself. — Ciceronianus the White
Natural law[1] (Latin: ius naturale, lex naturalis) is a system of law based on a close observation of human nature, and based on values intrinsic to human nature that can be deduced and applied independent of positive law (the enacted laws of a state or society).[2] According to natural law theory, all people have inherent rights, conferred not by act of legislation but by "God, nature, or reason."[3] Natural law theory can also refer to "theories of ethics, theories of politics, theories of civil law, and theories of religious morality."[4]
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Stoic natural law
The development of this tradition of natural justice into one of natural law is usually attributed to the Stoics. The rise of natural law as a universal system coincided with the rise of large empires and kingdoms in the Greek world.[20][full citation needed] Whereas the "higher" law that Aristotle suggested one could appeal to was emphatically natural, in contradistinction to being the result of divine positive legislation, the Stoic natural law was indifferent to either the natural or divine source of the law: the Stoics asserted the existence of a rational and purposeful order to the universe (a divine or eternal law), and the means by which a rational being lived in accordance with this order was the natural law, which inspired actions that accorded with virtue.[7]
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Natural law first appeared among the stoics who believed that God is everywhere and in everyone (see classical pantheism). According to this belief, within humans there is a "divine spark" which helps them to live in accordance with nature. The stoics felt that there was a way in which the universe had been designed, and that natural law helped us to harmonise with this.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_law
How do you think a Stoic would reply to this?If it exists, however, I think laws adopted by human governments are not the same as Natural Law. They exist apart from it, and regardless of it.
So the issue at hand seems to be the legitimacy/authority of the laws adopted by people?/.../ What the law is is not what we think it should be, or we think Nature or God requires it to be. If we think a law is bad, we think it should be changed or revoked, not that it doesn't exist.
toicism provides that we should act in certain ways towards each other and the rest of the world. It holds that we should act reasonably and virtuously, but it doesn't provide that we should do so towards others because they have certain "natural rights." We should do so because that is the proper way for us to live. For example, we shouldn't covet or steal what belongs to others because they have a "right" to their property, natural or otherwise, but because for a Stoic such things are indifferent and we disturb ourselves needlessly in pursuing or acquiring them which prevents us from having the tranquility and wisdom to live a life of virtue. — Ciceronianus the White
Surely you’d grant that morality derives from respect for others, not for oneself... — Banno
I think, to use these terms, morality derives respect (care) for oneself by one habitualizing (non-reciprocal) respect (care) for others. — 180 Proof
Legal positivism/realism doesn't maintain that every law is good. It merely maintains that every law is a law. It doesn't cease to exist if it's bad. — Ciceronianus the White
I think it can be argued many human laws are just stupid ideas and not really laws. — Athena
Are you merely saying that laws are not necessarily moral? Or is there something more to it? — Janus
Anyway, there are those that believe our Constitution here (U.S.) is a document which does not create rights, but which merely acknowledges pre-existing (natural) rights, and then sets out government's relation to those rights (defending, extending, infringing, etc.). Then John Marshall, first Chief Justice said something like "It is emphatically the province of this court to say what the law is." Marbury v Madison. Some argue that he pulled that out of his ass, but it's the law now because, well, he said so. — James Riley
And I think Marshall did not say what you have quoted him as saying, or I cannot find it. — tim wood
It establishes some as lawful, but in all cases subject to the establishing power of the constitution itself, and via that, the "people." — tim wood
To the extent it establishes powers in the Articles (taxes, make laws, etc.), those powers are expressly limited by rights acknowledged in the Bill of Rights (and Amendments). — James Riley
The simplest reply here is to point out that neither you nor I have any such rights under the Constitution. — tim wood
But it can never stand that the constitution is held to constitutionally violate itself. For how could it be that a part of the law would be superior to the law itself? — tim wood
I'm not sure where that argument is being made? — James Riley
I'm saying there are other approaches to morality where care for others plays a minor part, if any at all, yet the person who adheres to such morality behaves similarly as the one who is motivated by care for others. Two examples of such systems of morality are Stoicism and Early Buddhism. — baker
That's one of the things I'm saying. I'm also saying that they exist regardless of whether they're moral, or wise, or conform to Natural Law, or the social contract, or the will of the people; generally that what laws are and whether they exist is a question separate from their moral, or other, worth. — Ciceronianus the White
Implicit in supposing there are rights both superior to the Constitution and at the same time under the Constitution. — tim wood
I do not argue that human/natural rights only came into being with the constitution, only that the constitution makes of them matters of and under law, and under its supremacy clauses makes them subordinate to law. — tim wood
What right would you have under the constitution to violate the constitution? — tim wood
It must seem you confuse license with liberty and freedom. — tim wood
You can certainly falsely yell, "Fire!" in a crowded theater, but you should not. And under the law you run the risk of criminal and civil penalties if you do. — tim wood
So perhaps your understanding of what a right is, or entails, is relevant. For me it cannot ever mean merely an entitlement to do whatever one is able to do. — tim wood
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