Ciceronianus         
         
180 Proof         
         
James Riley         
         The mere thought of Hegel being an attorney inspires terror. — Ciceronianus the White
Valentinus         
         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. — Ciceronianus the White
Banno         
         
javi2541997         
         The law has nothing to do with morality...
isn't that obvious? — Banno
Isaac         
         No. It is not. I guess law is literally the reinforcement of morality... — javi2541997
javi2541997         
         what is the mechanism by which that connection is made? — Isaac
180 Proof         
         :fire:An unjust law is no law at all" ["Letter from a Birmingham Jail," 1963; Lex injusta non est lex]. — javi2541997
:100:Lex mala, lex nulla -- A bad law is no law. — javi2541997
unenlightened         
         I say: There is no Law but the Law! — Ciceronianus the White
I wonder what is the law that exists? Is it the paper appropriately signed and sealed, or is it the published version thereof, or is it a more complex construction of social effects that include the implementation thereof. If there can be a law that forbids unequal pay between genders, but there is is a gender pay gap, there seems to be be at the least a third question as to whether the writ runs or not. — unenlightened
baker         
         In order for people to take the law seriously, they must assume that the law is somehow a reflection of objective reality, objective morality, of "things as they really are". People need to take for granted that the law is more than a matter of political machinations between politicians.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? — Ciceronianus the White
When people believe that might makes right.By which I mean that if law is the reinforcement of morality, what is the mechanism by which that connection is made? — Isaac
Metaphysician Undercover         
         I say: There is no Law but the Law! — Ciceronianus the White
Mww         
         I say: There is no Law but the Law! — 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. — Ciceronianus the White
Hanover         
         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. — Ciceronianus the White
Isaac         
         the purpose of searching with jurisprudence the most morality solution to the law dilemmas. — javi2541997
Hanover         
         The law has nothing to do with morality...
isn't that obvious?
Any correspondence between the Law and the Good is surely coincidental... — Banno
javi2541997         
         
Ciceronianus         
         
Ciceronianus         
         What about something like environmental law? It is always a reflection of an "assumed standard" or set of models that gets hashed out by scientific peer review. Beyond the particular acts of regulation and remediation, the "assumed standard" is a social contract to be a steward of the environment rather than merely living as a rapacious generation with no thought of any life afterwards. — Valentinus
Ciceronianus         
         isn't that obvious? — Banno
Valentinus         
         
Ciceronianus         
         Men do not make laws. They do but discover them. — javi2541997
ernest meyer         
         
Ciceronianus         
         No, we can neither expect nor demand respect for the law just because it has been promulgated, regardless of its content. What matters is not respect for this or that (often accidental) decision of the majority in a parliament or of a judge. Rather, what matters is respect for the moral law, which may or may not coincide with the positive law and which involves the legally irrelevant distinction between good and evil. — javi2541997
Ciceronianus         
         
Ciceronianus         
         The law can change, and then there is the old law and the new law. — unenlightened
To speak of law without mention of the power of enforcement seems to me to miss something essential. — unenlightened
Ciceronianus         
         What does "the Law" here refer to, other than an assumed standard? — Metaphysician Undercover
Ciceronianus         
         Law, by which I do not mean a law, or the law, but law in itself, does conform to a standard, it isn’t law if it doesn’t, and it explains what law is, hence is not the ignoring of it even while ignoring its instances. — Mww
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