Despite
his limited formal education, Shakespeare’s works display a great deal of legal
knowledge.[1] As a part of Shakespeare’s vast imaginative
universe, his storylines and characters help us (among countless other things) to
analyze the command form of legal positivism, a form of legal positivism
holding that laws are commands of sovereigns backed by threats of punishment.
Various scenarios in the plays help us see how such an approach cannot succeed. As I plan to show in subsequent blogs, Shakespeare
also: (a) beautifully lays out arguments for natural law only to demolish them;
(b) centuries before Holmes formulated his prediction theory of law (the theory
that the law is a set of predictions as to how the courts will act in certain
circumstances), Shakespeare penned plays that help us see how such theory
fails; and (c) Shakespeare otherwise gives us insightful bits and pieces from
which we might begin generating a workable jurisprudence complying with the
semiotics of law and its inherent restraints.[2] In this
first of four planned blogs (all four of which draw from my longer article Let’s Skill
All the Lawyers), I’ll briefly explore the command theory form of legal
positivism using insights from Shakespeare.
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 Command. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Command. Show all posts
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Shakespeare and Legal Positivism
Labels:
Command,
Divine Right of Kings,
Falstaff,
God,
H.L.A. Hart,
Hamlet,
Henry IV,
Jurisprudence,
King John,
King Lear,
Law,
Legal Positivism,
Macbeth,
Natural Law,
Philosophy,
Richard II,
Shakespeare,
Sovereign,
Threat
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