(This blog combines, expands, and end-notes two prior blogs)
In addition to law and language generally, this blog explores philosophy, translation, poetry (including my own poetry and translations), legal education reform, genealogy, rhetoric, politics, and other things that interest me from time to time. I consider all my poems and translations flawed works in progress, tweak them unpredictably, and consider the latest-posted versions the latest "final" forms. I'd enjoy others' thoughts on anything posted. © Harold Anthony Lloyd 2024
Showing posts with label Bruegel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bruegel. Show all posts
Sunday, March 5, 2017
Gorsuch and Originalism: Some Critiques from Logic, Scripture, and Art
(This blog combines, expands, and end-notes two prior blogs)
Labels:
Art,
Auden,
Balkin,
Bruegel,
Constitution,
Ekphrasis,
Gorsuch,
Icarus,
Interpretation,
Language,
Law,
Legal Theory,
Old Testament,
Originalism,
Poetry,
Pragmatics,
Religion,
Scalia,
Supreme Court,
Ten Commandments
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
Originalism and the Fall of Icarus
Well, here we go
again. With Neil Gorsuch as the current Supreme Court nominee, once more we
hear praises of “originalism” as a judicial interpretive philosophy. As Gorsuch
puts it, judges should “apply the law as it is, focusing
backward, not forward, and looking to text, structure, and history to decide
what a reasonable reader at the time of the events in question would have
understood the law to be . . . .” Since law generally looks forward
to govern future and not past behavior, and since context drives meaning in
much more complex ways than Gorsuch’s words suggest, I’m amazed that people take
this backward-looking and overly-simplistic philosophy seriously. I’ve written at length about the problems
with such an approach but now also wonder if an old painting might
more quickly dispatch such error.
Labels:
Art,
Auden,
Bruegel,
Category,
Context,
Ekphrasis,
Ethics,
Framing,
Gorsuch,
Icarus,
Icon,
Interpretation,
Language,
Law,
Meaning,
Originalism,
Scalia,
Semiotics,
Symbol,
Textualism
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