John Gardner on the Scope of Legal Positivism

Autores/as

  • Brian H. Bix University of Minnesota

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4454/8m7vym28

Palabras clave:

John Gardner, Hart-Fuller Debate, Legal Positivism, Legal Validity, Theory Construction

Resumen

In Legal Positivism: 5½ Myths, John Gardner argued that legal positivism should be understood only as a thesis about the validity of individual norms. This influential view has had the effect of discounting and marginalizing two other important questions about the separation or non-separation of law and morality: regarding the legal status of significantly immoral legal systems, and regarding the role of moral evaluation in the construction of theories about the nature of law. More importantly, there is far less attention now paid than there should be to the interesting theoretical question of the extent to which a position in favor of separation (or non-separation) on one topic entails, or at least strongly supports, a similar view on the other topics.

Publicado

2024-09-18

Número

Sección

The Jurisprudence of John Gardner and the Fundamentals of Law