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; — Ciceronianus the White
it doesn't explain it. — Ciceronianus the White
It leads to a fundamental ignorance of the nature of the law and its operation. — Ciceronianus the White
The moral law involves the "illegally irrelevant" distinction between good and evil. Just what a positivist would maintain. — Ciceronianus the White
If the local sheriff wouldn't enforce the law, the prosecutor wouldn't prosecute the law, the juries wouldn't convict under the law, the judge wouldn't sentence under the law, and the warden wouldn't incarcerate under the law, then it was not the law, correct? — Hanover
On the other hand, with natural law, some natural or divine force is posited to justify the existence of the law, but with positivism, it seems (and explain if I have this wrong) the law is a rule laid down that gains acceptance and the nuance of what the law actually is will vary depending upon how the people at the time accept it to be. — Hanover
By which I mean that if law is the reinforcement of morality, what is the mechanism by which that connection is made? — Isaac
When people believe that might makes right. — baker
we need to put necessarily moralism inner laws to reinforce the development of ethical/moral issues — javi2541997
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!
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
For one who believed the law were a matter of convention irrelevant of morality, it seems they would have a challenge to explain (or argue against) the general concordance of, say, the "Thou shalt nots" with laws over legal systems. — fdrake
What I'm getting at is if the two systems have some crossover in their strategies then we'd not be surprised to see some crossover in methods, even if they remain two separate systems. — Isaac
What laws are in force in that system depends on what social standards its officials recognize as authoritative; for example, legislative enactments, judicial decisions, or social customs. The fact that a policy would be just, wise, efficient, or prudent is never sufficient reason for thinking that it is actually the law, and the fact that it is unjust, unwise, inefficient or imprudent is never sufficient reason for doubting it. — Ciceronianus the White
Any correspondence between the Law and the Good is surely coincidental... — Banno
If judges decree which laws are to be enforced based upon the justice, wisdom, efficiency, or prudence of the law and those pronouncements are recognized by law as authoritative, then are we within a positivist or natural law system? — Hanover
For one who believed the law were a matter of convention irrelevant of morality, it seems they would have a challenge to explain (or argue against) the general concordance of, say, the "Thou shalt nots" with laws over legal systems. — fdrake
Your - Ciceronianus's -perception of "Law" as being something which is found in an "Absolute Truth" is erroneous, because "Law" is not something intrinsically real, but instead, artificially created. — Gus Lamarch
I guess law is literally the reinforcement of morality... — javi2541997
It is to learned, intelligent, wise and reasonable people, yes. But there are distressingly few of us. — Ciceronianus the White
I think you must be referring to some other Ciceronianus, unknown to me. — Ciceronianus the White
What say you to that, if anything? — Ciceronianus the White
I must have said something in the middle of the first page that people here think it's incredibly stupid, or incredibly smart, because nobody referred it. Or maybe the perception is that it's incredibly ignorable. My view certainly does not lend itself to the learned arguments over philosophies of hifolutin' law practicing dudes, but I believe what I said was rock solid. — god must be atheist
Law conforms to morality inasmuch as both are aides to preserve the tribe, and they promote behaviour that the tribe uses to successfully survive. The law changes according to how the tribe's needs change. By "tribe" I mean a society, small or big: a literal tribe, of five families or so, up to the Chinese People's Republic, with 1.5 billion and still counting. — god must be atheist
The more accurate statement then would be that the law does not necessarily correlate to morality, but sometimes it does, and sometimes it intentionally does. — Hanover
If your local government legalized rape, wouldn't your objection to the law have something to do with the immorality of it, and don't you think your local politicians would be motivated to change the law based upon an appeal to their sense of right and wrong? If they do illegalize rape out of respect for its immorality, wouldn't that be an instance of a law having something to do with morality? — Hanover
If by an "assumed standard" you mean something that is adopted by a state or sovereign to regulate conduct, is codified, is enforceable by the state or others through an established system of processing and adjudicating violations or claims and making judgments, then I suppose an "assumed standard" may include laws. But I doubt that is what Austin intended by it. — Ciceronianus the White
Yes, analogous to convergent evolution in biology. — James Riley
I find this to be an interesting statement. How could a law intentionally correlate to morality? Let's say that different lawmakers make laws for different reasons, morality might be one. Suppose a lawmaker proposes a law which is apprehended by that lawmaker as correlating to morality. Doesn't that law have to be passed by all the other lawmakers involved, before it becomes a law? Each of those lawmakers has one's own intentions. So, by the time the law is passed, the one who proposed the law had the intent of morality, but all the others had some other intentions, and unless those other intentions were morality, then we shouldn't say that the law intentionally correlates with morality. — Metaphysician Undercover
It might be a judge decreeing an interpretation of a law in a manner that comports to morality, and that would require a single person. — Hanover
I mean that it is people's belief (the fact that people believe) that might makes right that is the mechanism that ties the law to morality, or, rather, morality to law. "Such is the law, therefore, such is moral." (I'm actually paraphrasing a conversation I had with a police officer last summer.)By which I mean that if law is the reinforcement of morality, what is the mechanism by which that connection is made? — Isaac
When people believe that might makes right.
— baker
Wouldn't that just be self-fulfilling anyway. If some group were not able to enforce some proscription on behaviour then by definition they wouldn't be the 'mighty' in that case. This is true regardless of what the current law happens to say, so can't itself be a mechanism whereby law is tied to morality. — Isaac
Sometimes the law intentionally supports what is good. Sometimes it does not. — Banno
Yes, and this is a considerable part of the problem. Once a law is passed, it's like boarding a plane: one is stuck with it / on it for a duration of time, with no safe or easy exit.The law can and often should change. Once it is the law, though, it is the law regardless of its wisdom or morality. — Ciceronianus the White
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