I think I would just say that your fashion of answering perennial questions in the philosophy of law is itself a particular philosophical disposition. But, on the whole, I don't find distinctions between the philosophy of some practice and the practice to be terribly useful. Rather, it seems to me that in practicing such-and-such we already have some philosophical notions being put into practice -- some of which, I imagine, get challenged in the practice and some of which get affirmed. — Moliere
The philosophy of law, according to those descriptions, involves pondering such questions as "What is law?" and "What are the conditions of legal validity?" These aren't questions I've been asked to answer in my practice. I might be asked "What is the law (about something)?" but no judge or client has asked me "What is law?" — Ciceronianus the White
Law is what you must deal with, what you must comply with or evade (legally of course). It's the problem you want to resolve, the thing you want to take advantage of, something you'd like to see repealed, in the here and now. — Ciceronianus the White
. . . what you must deal with, what you must comply with or evade (legally of course). It's the problem you want to resolve, the thing you want to take advantage of, something you'd like to see repealed, in the here and now. — Ciceronianus the White
I wondered whether that's the case, but don't feel knowledgeable enough in those professions to address the philosophy which is "of" them.A guard against metaphysical infection in the practice of a profession that prides itself on objectivity and facts is not unheard of. And I'm not just talking about the practice of law. — Caldwell
They're grounded in something very real, human conduct, desires and aversions, and their purpose is determined by what those making and enforcing laws want to achieve regarding those things. — Ciceronianus the White
Consider: a scientist may say that science is nothing more than what scientists do. — Moliere
If someone were to define law without some knowledge of the law, be it in practice or in its history, then I'd probably not think their position was well founded. But that wouldn't invalidate their position, but rather their method -- they could have, after all, stumbled upon a good answer. They just don't have good reasons for it. — Moliere
Cicero's emphasis on enforcement is interesting, because it does not distinguish the legal system from the Mafia at all. — unenlightened
it seems to me that in practicing such-and-such we already have some philosophical notions being put into practice — Moliere
Am I alone in having a viscerally negative reaction to this sort of thinking? — Srap Tasmaner
On the one hand, I think philosophy, much like science, begins in everyday efforts at reasoning in everyday situations. Do this more reflectively, more systematically, and you're doing something else, despite the origin, because you've changed the context, the goals, all sorts of things — Srap Tasmaner
I've also thought it ridiculous for philosophers to claim everyone is always taking philosophical positions, or that they're implied. It seems like an attempt at self aggrandizement, like the undergraduate who comes home for Christmas break and lectures his parents on their metaphysical assumptions.
(Are philosophers more prone than other sorts of scholars to worry that what they do is pointless? Do they feel more need than others to assert the importance of what they do?) — Srap Tasmaner
I hope this doesn't sound like a personal attack. It's not remotely. Just something I think about now and then. I'm hoping you can make such claims seem more reasonable than they seem to me now.
I'd like to hear more from you on this argument. While I don't think there is a single point at which basic reasoning becomes philosophy, I would be interested in hearing what you believe philosophy to be as opposed to what the philosophy of is such that it seems ridiculous to claim that those engaged in some activity obviously do not have philosophical beliefs. — Moliere
It may be that we carry with us beliefs that influence in some sense in all we do. But in my reply to Erik I said that philosophy of law would become a kind of special pleading "unless it considers first the law in its actual operation makes reasonable inferences from such an analysis." I have hopes that preconceptions may have less of an effect if that's the starting point.But such is always the case or at least should be. We carry with us foundational principles we adhere to and from that we create a consistent world view. How is it that the subject of ethics creates less a challenge to you than your question of what is law? Belief in God, for example will similarly shape the ethical theory you accept. — Hanover
Are you "doing" the philosophy of philosophy, in making this statement? Is "doing" the philosophy of law similar, then? Are philosophers of law simply expressing their opinion of what law is, or their opinions regarding what it is that is done by those people who make the laws, enforcement them, or practice law? If that's the case, I would think an understanding of the law and how it operates would be necessary if such opinions are to have any validity.I see philosophy as being defined, to a large extent, by the philosopher themself. What counts as philosophy and what counts as good philosophy are oftentimes bounded by the philosophy which someone is proposing — Moliere
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