So Natural Law is not the law. It seems we agree after all. — Ciceronianus the White
Which was when? Where? — Ciceronianus the White
If you disagree with those definitions, so be it. — Ciceronianus the White
How do you know matters were settled by the persuasion of reason prior to the time the first law was written? — Ciceronianus the White
We lawyers don't practice natural law; we're not "natural lawyers." When we attended law school, you and I weren't taught how to be good,or just, or moral, nor were we taught that the law we were to practice was what God or nature established. We weren't admitted to the bar because we were learned in natural law or ethics. — Ciceronianus the White
Is natural law a type of law?
Is there is a distinction between "law" as you have presented it here in this thread and "positive law" as I have defined it here? — Hanover
There's a difference between morality and the (positive) law. I don't think they can be conflated, nor do I think they should be. — Ciceronianus the White
I do not get the distinctions you're making, or why, — tim wood
For me, natural law is not law. "Moral principles" are not law. They're principles. — Ciceronianus the White
...the nature of the law and its operation. — Ciceronianus the White
And that is why some people don't recognize the law. It's not their law. — James Riley
I would assume such people think that, when the world we live in fails to meet their expectation, it isn't their world. But the world isn't their world, nor is the law their law. — Ciceronianus the White
Natural law is defined as "a body of unchanging moral principles regarded as a basis for all human conduct."
Positive law is defined as "statutes which have been laid down by a legislature, court, or other human institution and can take whatever form the authors want. Compare with natural law." — Hanover
The person who wields the stick honestly thinks there is an independent nexus between the X and the stick. I don't. So, while the stick exists and he can hit me with it, I see him hitting me with the stick and he see's himself hitting me with X. He recognizes his X (X=X=X). I do not. If he wants obedience beyond coercion, he must appeal to reason. Failure to do so leaves him with nothing but a stick. — James Riley
I say all this because, as it seems, you're not objecting to what the law says. You're objecting to any claim that the law comes from anywhere other than the hand of man. You're also not denying that there are rules that derive from a source beyond man. You just refuse to call those rules "laws." — Hanover
You will have that feeling because of Natural Law. — James Riley
There's a difference between morality and the (positive) law. I don't think they can be conflated, nor do I think they should be. — Ciceronianus the White
I wonder why you insist on calling such feelings "Natural Law." — Ciceronianus the White
What I understand by the x=x=x (questionable metaphor alert) is akin to getting a meal in a restaurant. What went into making it may, could, even arguably should be of interest, but all that is nothing as to the meal itself: that is what it is and no prior circumstance or condition can alter that. — tim wood
"a body of unchanging moral principles regarded as a basis for all human conduct." — James Riley
and the obvious point is that moral principles are not law. — Banno
Do I have to come there and we have an arm-twisting contest on whose words we use? What is the substance of your point? Even, do you understand your own point? is it a claim or reasoned? You can have your claims, but what is your reason? What inhabits natural law that finds no expression in "mere" law? Is it the codifying, which straitens natural law?Whereas the law is not the sum of Natural Law. It is a mere pretender to it. — James Riley
The existence of law is one thing; its merit and demerit another. Whether it be or be not is one enquiry; whether it be or be not conformable to an assumed standard, is a different enquiry.
So wrote John Austin in the 19th century, by reputation the creator of legal positivism. So thinks Ciceronianus, the author of this post.
I think any practicing lawyer, or judge, would accept the statement made by Austin quoted above without hesitation. — Ciceronianus the White
Not all of those considered legal philosophers were lawyers, alas. I don't think Aristotle, Aquinas, Hobbes, Rousseau or Mill were lawyers. The mere thought of Hegel being an attorney inspires terror. Cicero, Grotius, Bentham, Montesquieu, Austin, Holmes, Hart and Dworkin were lawyers (Monty was a judge). — Ciceronianus the White
There's a difference between morality and the (positive) law. I don't think they can be conflated, nor do I think they should be.
— Ciceronianus the White
Seems obvious. Hence, the question "Is that law good?" remains open. — Banno
Do I have to come there and we have an arm-twisting contest on whose words we use? — tim wood
What is the substance of your point? — tim wood
Even, do you understand your own point? — tim wood
is it a claim or reasoned? — tim wood
You can have your claims, but what is your reason? — tim wood
What inhabits natural law that finds no expression in "mere" law? — tim wood
What does natural law permit that mere, written law prohibits or eliminates? — tim wood
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