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    A Pragmatic Standard of Legal Validity

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    Date
    2012-07-16
    Author
    Tyler, John
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    Abstract
    American jurisprudence currently applies two incompatible validity standards to determine which laws are enforceable. The natural law tradition evaluates validity by an uncertain standard of divine law, and its methodology relies on contradictory views of human reason. Legal positivism, on the other hand, relies on a methodology that commits the analytic fallacy, separates law from its application, and produces an incomplete model of law. These incompatible standards have created a schism in American jurisprudence that impairs the delivery of justice. This dissertation therefore formulates a new standard for legal validity. This new standard rejects the uncertainties and inconsistencies inherent in natural law theory. It also rejects the narrow linguistic methodology of legal positivism. In their stead, this dissertation adopts a pragmatic methodology that develops a standard for legal validity based on actual legal experience. This approach focuses on the operations of law and its effects upon ongoing human activities, and it evaluates legal principles by applying the experimental method to the social consequences they produce. Because legal history provides a long record of past experimentation with legal principles, legal history is an essential feature of this method. This new validity standard contains three principles. The principle of reason requires legal systems to respect every subject as a rational creature with a free will. The principle of reason also requires procedural due process to protect against the punishment of the innocent and the tyranny of the majority. Legal systems that respect their subjects' status as rational creatures with free wills permit their subjects to orient their own behavior. The principle of reason therefore requires substantive due process to ensure that laws provide dependable guideposts to individuals in orienting their behavior. The principle of consent recognizes that the legitimacy of law derives from the consent of those subject to its power. Common law custom, the doctrine of stare decisis, and legislation sanctioned by the subjects' legitimate representatives all evidence consent. The principle of autonomy establishes the authority of law. Laws must wield supremacy over political rulers, and political rulers must be subject to the same laws as other citizens. Political rulers may not arbitrarily alter the law to accord to their will. Legal history demonstrates that, in the absence of a validity standard based on these principles, legal systems will not treat their subjects as ends in themselves. They will inevitably treat their subjects as mere means to other ends. Once laws do this, men have no rest from evil.
    URI
    https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2012-05-10885
    Subject
    natural law theory
    legal positivism
    HLA Hart
    William Blackstone
    John Locke
    Jeremy Bentham
    John Austin
    Galileo
    Socrates
    Trotsky
    Athens
    Soviet law
    Stuart dynasty
    John Dewey
    Dewey Commission
    Sidney Hook
    Congregation of the Holy Office
    Galileo Affair
    trial of Socrates
    Moscow Trials
    trial of Galileo
    heresy
    trial of Trotsky
    reason
    autonomy
    consent
    philosophy of law
    pragmatism
    Kant
    Inquisition
    ostracism
    Anaxagoras
    Protagoras
    Alcibiades
    Arginusae
    Pericles
    Peloponnesian War
    Solon
    Ephialtes
    Apology
    Plato
    Herodotus
    Xenophon
    Plutarch
    Roscoe Pound
    common law
    Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
    The Common Law
    The Path of the Law
    Learned Hand
    Christopher Columbus Langdell
    Ronald Dworkin
    Lon Fuller
    Lenin
    Stalin
    King Rex
    Sergei Kirov
    Permanent Revolution
    Socialism in One Country
    Great Terror
    Dekulakization
    Holomodor
    Terror Famine
    Italian positivist school
    Harold J. Berman
    Gustav Radbruch
    Ramon Mercader
    Trotsky assassination
    Marteman Ryutin
    Old Bolsheviks
    Genrikh Yagoda
    Pope Urban VIII
    Walter Duranty
    Harold Denny
    New York Times
    Joseph E. Davies
    Mission to Moscow
    New Republic
    John F. Finerty
    Lev Sedov
    Military Collegium
    Vasili Ulrikh
    Gaspare Borgia
    Cardinal Robert Bellarmine
    Pericles
    Father Commissary Michelangelo Segizzi
    Cardinal Francesco Barberini
    Cardinal Maffeo Barberini
    Dialogue on the Two Chief World Systems, Ptolemaic and Copernican
    Siderius Nuncius
    Starry Messenger
    Accademia dei Lincei
    Letters on Sunspots
    Friar Tommaso Caccini
    Niccolo Lorini
    Commentaries on the Laws of England
    Second Treatise on Civil Government
    Henry de Bracton
    Sir Edward Coke
    Sir John Fortescue
    Matthew Hale
    Ranulf de Glanvil
    James I
    Charles I
    James II
    Charles II
    ship money
    forest fines
    distraint of knighthood
    impositions
    dispensing power
    royal prerogative
    Duke of Buckingham
    Oliver Cromwell
    Bishops Wars
    William Prynne
    Great Migration
    Declaration of Indulgence
    Settlement Act
    Test Act
    Protectorate
    Clarendon Code
    Quaker Act
    William and Mary
    English Civil War
    Puritan Revolution
    Glorious Revolution
    Thirty Years' War
    Earl of Shaftesbuty
    William Laud
    Historiomatrix
    Long Parliament
    Rump Parliament
    Barebones Parliament
    sociological jurisprudence
    Red Terror
    war communism
    New Economic Policy
    1926 Criminal Code
    Kirov Amendments
    judicial discretion
    semantic sting
    The Concept of Law
    Fragments on Government
    The Province of Jurisprudence Determined
    A Fragment on Government
    Positivism and the Separation of Law and Morals
    Anarchical Fallacies
    primary rules
    secondary rules
    rule of recognition
    legal validity
    internal point of view
    external point of view
    law as prediction
    the bad man perspective on law
    life of the law
    page of history
    Basilikon Doron
    Trew Law of Free Monarchies
    Collections
    • Electronic Theses, Dissertations, and Records of Study (2002– )
    Citation
    Tyler, John (2012). A Pragmatic Standard of Legal Validity. Doctoral dissertation, Texas A&M University. Available electronically from https : / /hdl .handle .net /1969 .1 /ETD -TAMU -2012 -05 -10885.

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