Talk:Legal positivism

Latest comment: 4 months ago by Mathglot in topic "Disputed" tag


Introduction

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Currently the introduction is


"Legal positivism is a school of thought of philosophy of law and jurisprudence, largely developed by eighteenth and nineteenth-century legal thinkers such as Jeremy Bentham and John Austin. However, the most prominent figure in the history of legal positivism is H. L. A. Hart, whose work The Concept of Law caused a fundamental re-thinking of the positivist doctrine and its relationship with the other principal theories of law. In more recent years the central claims of legal positivism have come under significant attack from Ronald Dworkin."

As someone who knows nothing about the topic, this introduction does not help me at all. Considering google is also now using the first sentence as a feature when searching topics, it only highlights the largely esoteric nature that the contributors to this article have taken. I'm sure I sound demanding, but I believe the article would be so much better if the introduction outlined at least roughly what Legal Positivism IS and not who developed it. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 210.54.34.40 (talk) 10:05, 22 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

Problem

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The sentence which states there is no connection between "law ethics, hence marality" makes no sense. Indeed it is not a complete thought. I had hoped to figure out how to correct it but the idea itself is so obscured by the poor language that I do not know what is being expressed. I have a few suggestions: there is no necessary connection between law and ethics. But then what of this "hence, morality" part? What does it mean? That morality itself comes from the disconnect between law and ethics? Could someone please correct this, it hurts my brain to look at it?

Alexy, POV

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It is far from a certainty, and definitely far from an undisputed fact, that 'freedom is of obvious ethical significance', which the article without quoting any other source specifically stated before I modified it slightly to say 'according to Alexy...'. I thought I should report this edit in the discussion section. 213.112.137.177 15:22, 27 August 2006 (UTC)Reply

Plagarism

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The entire page appears to be copied from [this website:=http://www.answers.com/topic/legal-positivism] Either that, or they copied you.

Yoda921 07:23, 27 February 2007 (UTC)YodaReply

If you look at the blue bar, you'll see answers.com gives credit to wikipedia. They do this all the time. Danielx (talk) 10:26, 25 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Against merging "laws without ethical content"

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The fact that laws can be devoid of ethical content (which is different from claiming that laws can be devoid of an ethical basis) is not disputed by natural lawyers. It is not therefore a tenet of legal positivism that distinguishes it from its rivals. Hence the article "laws without ethical content" should NOT be merged to this article on legal positivism.

Simple facts, no?

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Aren't the two points in the introduction simple facts? The first seems to derive from the definition of the word "law" itself. Is there an opposing school of thought which contradicts either one of these? Danielx (talk) 10:31, 25 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Also against merging "Laws without ethical content"

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The article, "Laws without ethical content" defines such a law as "one that does not proscribe or mandate an act because of the act's moral or ethical value, but for some other reason." Positivism expresses no view on the motivation behind laws. It simply holds that law is a human posit, and does not flow DIRECTLY form morality itself. Humans may posit laws because of our moral convictions or for any other reason. But, according to positivism, these laws are still human posits. Don Loeb (talk) 01:07, 17 December 2007 (UTC)Reply

Contemporary Practice?

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Are there U.S. supreme court judges who would be considered Legal Positivists? I came to this page from the entry on Holmes, and wonder how this legal philosophy is used in today's world. Who uses it? How prevalent is it taught and practiced in the legal profession at large, and in the top courts of the U.S.? Also, is it strictly American, or is it also a philosophy in other cultures? (added this note on Oct. 23, 2008)

"Of course" non-NPOV

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The article currently claims "Of course, in the Republic of the United States, the citizens have granted through the Constitution authority and power to the government to determine and enforce the laws." I can see multiple objections to this statement - which is disputed and non-NPOV as well as cn - including:

  • Objections to the social contract theory in general, e.g. from anarchists.
  • Objections to the historical claim, e.g. was the constitution a compact among the states or among the citizens.
  • P.S. Objections to the claim that the United States government actually operates according to either the constitution or a social contract.
  • It is, of course, a claim of certain political philosophies and not one that all people would regard as true, of course, or even coherent. 71.191.213.197 (talk) 22:25, 14 February 2009 (UTC)Reply
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Exclusive and inclusive positivism

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Should the section on positivism and ethics be edited to describe exclusive and inclusive positivism? I'm not sure if it corresponds with the "hard" and "soft" versions currently there; to be honest it is presently very vague. I think describing the necessity of the connection between law and morality would be better in terms of exclusive and inclusive positivism, which would account for much of the present literature on the topic, and also sound much better. 218.186.12.217 (talk) 11:52, 8 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Section heading

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There's a section heading called "Legal positivism and strict interpritivism". Aside from the spelling of "interpritivism", what is this supposed to mean? There's a philosophy of strict constructionism, but it's not clear that this is what the section is about, as the article needs more clarity in its prose and better development. --Michael Snow (talk) 20:11, 28 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

Actually, you're raising a bigger issue than you might know. To beggin with, strict interpritation is synonamous with textualism, a belief that one should consult the existing text and the existing text only when understanding its meaning. The larger issue is that this view is not held by all legal positivists. I 'think' this reading would be something advocated by Joseph Raz or someone of his ilk. The section drastically needs to be rewritten to note the importance of the one for the other, but to more clearly state their unnecessary connection. Piratejosh85 (talk) 21:27, 28 April 2009 (UTC)Reply


Using English syntax

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From the section: Legal validity and the sources of law

"Why the tendency is critical is for that the claim simultaneously opens the possibility to directly access to the constitution by those who have not direct legal interest so that the possible vein claim could be readily abused by some political movement(s) which is not regarded as normal work(s) of any law system. However, it is also true that legal positivism contributes to improve the way of legal reasoning in term of more nomothetic (rule-making) approach to a case in turn. To the point, legal positivim and legal realism are similar to each other except to recognizing the source(s) of law and jurisprudene. The reason why legal positivism is popular to are largely depending on its assimiliation to the modern normal science and its acceptance of social class theory else."

Can someone with better knowledge than I of the intended meaning of this section clean up the phrasing so that it is understandable? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.143.141.15 (talk) 07:00, 19 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

Hart as the most prominent positivist?

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The claim made early in the article that Hart is the most prominent positivist may be based on a parochial assessment. Although I am more sympathetic to Hart's version of positivism than Kelsen's, I must acknowledge that outside the Anglo-American world - and, alas, there are very many scholars outside the Anglo-American world - Kelsen is more widely studied than Hart. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 177.142.70.108 (talk) 17:21, 15 July 2012 (UTC)Reply

Time problem: 19th century is not 1700s

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The first and second lines of the article tells that Jeremy Bentham and John Austin are 19th century writers. Wrong. They are 18th and 19th (jsut John Austin) century writers as they wrote in the 1700s (John Austin wrote in 1800s). I suggest we modify the text with 18th and 19th century. [1] [2]

128.163.8.28 (talk) 17:12, 1 May 2013 (UTC)Reply

Has been changed (though not by me) to "eighteenth and nineteenth-century legal thinkers such as Jeremy Bentham and John Austin". Seems ok now. Wikiain (talk) 06:41, 4 May 2015 (UTC)Reply

References

A paragraph without meaning

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The problems with this paragraph are so serious that I will make my comments inline:

Legal positivism was focusing[*Why the past continuous verb? Why not simple past or even better, the simple present "focuses"?] on how to prevent possible conflict between[*what is the object of this preposition? Like this: Between "A and B" where A is "concurrent rule(s) and successive norm(s)" and B is "or foundation of law(s)". Or is it something else.] concurrent rule(s)[*What is this? Does it indicate a singular or a plural or just laziness. It pollutes the whole paragraph.] and successive norm(s), or foundation of law(s) in reality so that it tends to equate the authority to compose a law(s) to[*Usually we would say "equates with" in this context] the authority to abolish a law(s). Why the tendency[*This is new. What tendency is this?] is critical is that the claim[*Ditto for the claim] simultaneously opens the possibility for direct access to the constitution by those who have no direct legal interest so that a possible vain claim could be readily abused by some political movement(s)[*Ditto] which is not regarded as normal work(s)[*Ditto] of any law system. However, it is also true that legal positivism contributes to improve[*This should be the participial verb form, improving.] the way(chain)[*What? I don't know what a "way(chain)" is.] of legal reasoning in terms of a more nomothetic (rule-making) approach to a case in turn[*in turn?]. To the point[*What point?], legal positivism and legal realism are similar to each other except in recognizing the source(s)[*Ditto] of law and jurisprudence. The(A)[*What is this?] reason why legal positivism is popular (to whom?)[*What is this?] is its assimilation of modern normal science and its acceptance of social class theory.[citation needed]

The errors in syntax and grammar and the repetitive use of stylistic shortcut(s), suggest to me that this has been written by a non-native speaker of English. If that is the case I suggest that that person write a more discursive explanation on this talk page that might express better what he or she is trying to say. Then, perhaps, we can tighten it up and produce a coherent paragraph. As it stands I have no idea what it means.

But first a little advice. A sentence's grammatical structure should reflect the logical structure of the underlying thought. Common English usage is to use the words "and" or "or" interchangeably to join the two words or phrases that comprise the object of the preposition "between". But, if the second item is a compound then you don't have a choice. You must write "between A or B and C" not "between A and B or C". The first means what you want (I think) but the second means the opposite.

Furthermore, there is no requirement that sentences be long and complex. Legal documents are usually written in a complex manner in order that there be no misunderstanding of the document's intended meaning. This has the effect of demanding a very close reading; no one wants to be hanged on a comma. But judges and lawyers are paid to do that kind of reading; you reader is not. You can afford to be less precise and easier to read. And you can always add another sentence to clarify. Clarity is the the goal.

Also, if you are going to introduce some new word or concept, make sure the meaning is clear. If there is tendency you have to say what it is. If there is a claim you have to state it. If it isn't absolutely clear from the nearby context, clarify it.

Finally, if you absolutely must indicate that a noun is to be taken as both singular and plural, then do so grammatically. For example, "If it is the case that a sentence (or sentences) is too complicated to understand, break it into pieces." Notice that in the following dependent clause it's not necessary to repeat the plural construction. If you have to change the structure of the whole sentence to make it grammatical, then do so.It's clearer that way.75.157.135.57 (talk) 08:04, 31 August 2013 (UTC)Reply

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I added a definition to the lede by extending a sentence: "holds that law is constructed from social facts, without regards to the merits of such law." This is a paraphrase of the Stanford source.

Feel free to improve it, but the article needed some definition of what the term means, not just its historical context. I avoided using the term "social constructs" and just stuck with the wording from the source. 2603:7081:1603:A300:8448:8888:CC8F:BC90 (talk) 12:00, 28 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

The Lead

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first paragraph

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The lead has been subject to many variations. Recently I replaced a tortuous version with this:

Legal positivism is a contested label covering a range of approaches in philosophy of law and jurisprudence that are commonly considered to hold (a) that law is not an occurrence in "nature" independently of human knowledge or action but is "positive" in the sense of being an observable social fact, (b) that this fact consists of "posited" products of human will, and (c) what is to count as 'law' is to be determined independently of moral value.
One or more of these tenets have been held, most prominently, by Thomas Hobbes in the 17th century, in the 18th and 19th centuries by Jeremy Bentham and John Austin, and in the 20th by Hans Kelsen, H. L. A. Hart, and Joseph Raz.

User:Mathglot has substituted another tortuous text. If I were to argue the toss between our texts, there could be a war and a pointless one. What I will insist on, however, against one of Mathglot's comments, is that the term "legal positivism" is not just various: it is contested. This has been examined in Stewart, Iain (2023). "Hans Kelsen, Legal Scientist". Journal of Legal Philosophy. 48: 119 at 122-24. (I identify as the author.) Its meaning has never had the coherence of representing a "school of thought".

My text above avoids supposing that "legal positivism" can usefully be characterised in an analytical (distinct from historical) way as a reaction to doctrines of natural law. That supposition is already incoherent, since (as Bobbio emphasises) the expression "natural law" (and equivalents) is itself contested. The lead to this article should not reproduce the contest over the phrase "legal positivism", only register it. Errantios (talk) 13:42, 19 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

I'm not entirely convinced by (a) that law is not an occurrence in "nature" independently of human knowledge or action but is "positive" in the sense of being an observable social fact, which seems a bit complicated and perhaps inaccurate (would prominent natural law theorists like Finnis deny that law is dependent on human action and observable?). Also (b) is debatable because certain strands of legal positivism (such as the German historical school, Santi Romano's legal institutionalism, and others) challenge the notion that law is solely the product of deliberate human will and argue that law can also emerge organically from established practices and customs. Finally (c) does not apply to "inclusive legal positivists" (such as Jules Coleman, Gerald J. Postema and the very same H.L.A. Hart) who argue that what counts as law is determined by moral values rather than "pedigree", if the rule of recognition so establishes.
. Gitz (talk) (contribs) 14:22, 19 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Gitz, you usefully illustrate the very problem that my formulation attempts to address with its "contested label", "covering a range" and "commonly considered". Errantios (talk) 22:41, 19 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
I'm okay with changing "school of thought" to something else, as long as it's supported by the sources. (See the collapsed snippet below for more on this.) However, your claim that contested label is a valid description, is without support in reliable sources, and thus cannot be the choice of words to use here in Wikipedia's voice, as you did in this edit. There is one source that does support it, namely your 2023 book review in J Legal Phil, but nothing else does. Several neutral searches in books and websites found terms such as theory, view, philosophy of law, major tradition, intellectual tradition, idea, and approach, but no contested label:
Some results from searches in books and web
Based on the numbers I found, I might choose something like, major tradition in the philosophy of law but other expressions have support and could serve equally well. However, contested label has no support, and cannot.
Given that your preferred term is not the majority view, nor even a significant minority view, but only the view of a tiny minority of one, per WP:DUEWEIGHT the expression contested label should not appear in the article at all; most certainly not in the defining sentence of the article, nor even in the body.
Regarding the rest of your proposed lead: as someone with expert knowledge and multiple academic publications on this topic to your credit, and who are probably used to addressing other professors and graduate students in the field, you are perhaps too familiar with the topic to see how abstruse and opaque your formulation is to those not already familiar with the field, which makes it all but unattainable for the general reader. This places it in violation of the MOS guideline for the MOS:LEADSENTENCE, which says:
The first sentence should introduce the topic, and tell the nonspecialist reader what or who the subject is, and often when or where. It should be in plain English.
Virtually nothing in your version is in plain English, least of all the first sentence. The version present in the article just before your edit was much better.
Regarding the term school of thought, I would say this: those are not my words, I merely restored them from an earlier version. You didn't seem to have any problem with school of thought before, as in this edit of yours, or this one. My edit was an improvement, restoring previous stable wording that is preferable to contested label, which is a no-go per the sources. However, like I said above, that does not mean that that is the best possible term, just the less-bad one from earlier on. There are plenty of other, better choices and I suggest we use one of them, such as "major theory in the philosophy of law" or similar, which is both in plain English, and represents a majority view among reliable, secondary sources. Thanks, Mathglot (talk) 05:48, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Replaced school of thought with intellectual tradition for now, until this settles out from the discussion. Mathglot (talk) 07:16, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
I could provide another list, this time of direct references to authors, which I think would fully justify the term "contested label". While that very phrase may be my own invention, the idea certainly is not. See, especially, Bobbio as summarised in my article. Or the most recent extensive recent reflection—Walter Ott and Anna Rea-Frauchiger, The Varieties of Legal Positivism (Dike, 2018)—which, although it characterises legal positivism as "one of the most important contemporary schools of thought", refers to "the dismaying inability to reach agreement" (p 1) and the book goes on to demonstrate exactly that. If there is a "school", it is a fractious one and thus of dubious identity. Or, even more recently, in 2021, Spaak and Mindus, The Cambridge Companion to Legal Positivism, which you quote as referring to "a 'theory', an 'intellectual tradition'" (p 3). For these words are used within the context of acknowledging "a considerable lack of clarity as to what, exactly, the term 'legal positivism' stands for, or should stand for" (p 2, see also later on p 3). They further claim that in other major European languages "the equivalents to the English term 'legal positivism' have had no very clear meaning" (p 3, cp 5). However, their discussion and the succeeding multinational contributions appear to me to show not that these meanings have been less clear than the English but that they too have been contested. Errantios (talk) 13:23, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
I could provide a much bigger list, showing that innumerable definitions have been given for 'Art' (even multiple books and chapters entitled, What is Art?) but that doesn't mean we should run over to the Art article and alter the lead sentence to "Art is a contested label". You could apply the same exercise to almost any field of academic study, as it is the business of academics to look at their field and define it as they see it. Heck, there are even numerous books called What Is Mathematics? There may be a place in a subsection lower down the body to get into an exposition of the the various definitions and disagreements about it over time and by different scholars, but the WP:LEADSENTENCE is very definitely not the place to do that. If and when someone does add a subsection like that, the contested label formulation, present in no other source, should not be the way to refer to it, unless by consensus as added by some other editor than the author of the phrase. Mathglot (talk) 16:54, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
I agree. Since Gallie's essay on essentially contested concepts we have plenty of those, but we don't need to specify in the lead sections of "democracy", "freedom", "equality", let alone "legal positivism" and other schools of thought, that these concepts are contested - in the lead, we should strive for clarity and simplicity. However, if we have enough sources and content to write a section on "Controversies over the concept of LP", that might be helpful. I plan to write a section on the exclusive/inclusive legal positivism controversy in the near future, yet I wouldn't specify in the lead that legal positivists have different views on the relations between morality and legal validity. Gitz (talk) (contribs) 17:10, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
May I suggest that we replace the current OS (Legal positivism is a modern intellectual tradition in the philosophy of law and jurisprudence that holds that law is a set of rules created by human beings who prescribe certain procedures for its enactment) with the following?

In jurisprudence and legal philosophy, legal positivism is the theory that the existence of the law and its content depend on social facts rather than on its value

As per WP:FIRST, this seems simpler and clearer. Most importantly, I strongly doubt that the current reference to procedures for enacting the law is mainstream: so-called "primitive law" has no such procedures, yet legal positivists acknowledge that it is law. The proposed text can be sourced with Green, Leslie (2003). "Legal Positivism". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Legal positivism is the thesis that the existence and content of law depends on social facts and not on its merits. Gitz (talk) (contribs) 17:32, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Gitz, I believe your formulation is accurate, but I would change social facts, even though accurate, to something clearer. The reason is, that here we are in the first sentence, trying to tell a reader who maybe knows nothing about legal positivism (otherwise why are they reading the first sentence?), possibly even nothing about law, and now we spring the term social facts on them, which presupposes some familiarity with the topic of social construction, or at least, how legal philosophers used the term social facts. I'm concerned that a reader will hit that phrase, and require a definition within a definition, or may stumble, thinking, "Hm, is that like facts on social media or something? No, that can't be it, oh well, let's skip it and read on..." or something like that. I.e., my concern is that we have a plain English problem, and the reader may take nothing from the phrase social facts, which here is an essential a priori building block to understanding the definition of legal positivism, something else they are not familiar with, and that combining the two is just too high a barrier for understanding.
That's one of the reasons I liked this edit (11:59, 16 June) by Maurice Magnus where he first changed social facts to created from prescribed procedures, because it removes that stumbling block for the more naive user, and allows them to read through the first sentence without stopping or speculating on what some more technical terms might mean. If you felt a certain clunkiness from created from prescribed procedures when you first read it, so did I, but at least it is clear what is meant there, and I much prefer the trade-off of increased clarity at the price of a bit of clunkiness. When I later came up with my version (of 11:02, 19 June), I mostly took over Maurice's version, changing that part to rules created by human beings prescribing certain procedures in order to try to shoehorn what we mean by social facts into that spot, with, I'll admit, equal (or worse) clunkiness, so there was still room for improvement. Maurice wasted no time in improving it, coming up with rules created by human beings who prescribe certain procedures for its enactment which I think is clearer, and less clunky.
As for the last part (...rather than on its value), I believe that here you are trying to deal with the validity issue, and/or with the essential distinction from natural law theory, is that right? I think that works for someone who already knows what legal positivism is, but the term merit leaves too many questions, and that validity or the sense of just law in natural law theory is too much to pack into that one word for someone reading about legal positivism, possibly for the first time. That's why I broke that part out into a second sentence, about the contrast with natural law theory, which seems essential to cover in the lead paragraph, if not the lead sentence. I'm interested in your thoughts on this, and whether you could incorporate some of these ideas along with your proposal to come up with a compromise version? Mathglot (talk) 18:51, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Reping User:Gitz6666. Mathglot (talk) 18:53, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
P.S., Just realized that the proposed wording is very close to the first sentence of the SEP article, and may be too close for us to adopt in that form. Mathglot (talk) 19:21, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Gitz, by the way, re your idea to write up a section on exclusive/inclusive variants, by all means please do. While searching above for the lead thing, I came up with a couple of good references which had chapters on each; lmk if you want me to go find them again. Mathglot (talk) 19:30, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Gitz, besides the two I found earlier, turns out there are two really good refs already in the article that you could mine to back up a new section on exclusive/inclusive: Marmor (2004), and Himma (2024). Mathglot (talk) 02:04, 26 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

second paragraph

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Mathglot (talk) In the opening section (is that what "OS" means?), I like the first paragraph, but not the second sentence of the second paragraph. It reads, "While Bentham and Austin developed legal positivist theory, empiricism provided the theoretical basis for its developments to occur." That is too abstract for a newcomer to the subject, and even for me. I know what all the words mean, but why do we need a theoretical basis to develop a theory? Isn't a theoretical basis a theory, which would mean that we'd need a theoretical basis to develop a theoretical basis, ad infinitum? And how does empiricism provide a theoretical basis? That statement is worth little without elaboration. Maurice Magnus (talk) 19:44, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

Maurice Magnus, Absolutely agree; that wording goes back to before my time here, at least to May 2020, and with slightly different wording, to 2018 or before. Please by all means remove/alter/fix this as you see fit. P.S., I am subscribed; no need to ping. Mathglot (talk) 20:31, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Thanks, but since I don't know what the previous editor was attempting to say, I am unable to fix it. I will just delete the sentence and leave it to others to expand the paragraph as they think appropriate. Maurice Magnus (talk) 20:47, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Maurice Magnus Removing sounds fine to me. That leaves the second paragraph sounding like name-dropping, without really imparting any information. I've expanded it in this edit to give a very brief summary of the history, but ran out of steam before I got to Hart; can you please expand/reword/modify a bit? (After that, a third paragraph could be envisioned, to handle Finnis/other critiques, as well as Gitz's plan for in-/ex-clusive notions.) Thanks, Mathglot (talk) 22:07, 20 June 2024 (UTC) P.S. I don't know what was intended by "O.S."; I assumed "opening sentence". Mathglot (talk) 22:11, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
What you wrote seems fine, except for a minor typo, which I fixed. But I'm afraid that I am no longer competent to discuss Kelsen or Hart, whom I haven't read since the 1980s, or Raz, whom I've never read. Maurice Magnus (talk) 22:20, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Just noticed that I introduced some redundancy in the discussion of validity, which also appears in the first paragraph in a different form; this needs consolidation or clean-up. Mathglot (talk) 22:24, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

I previously objected to the use of the term social facts towards the end of the first paragraph as being too obscure for a nonspecialist. However, we could add something about social facts to P2 S3 ("Early positivists...") by modifying that sentence thus:

...with the validity of the law deriving from society's recognition of the sovereign's authority to declare law and enforce it.
+
...with the validity of the law deriving from the social fact of society's recognition of the sovereign's authority to declare law and enforce it.

and then it wouldn't be so bad to leave social facts undefined in the end of the first paragraph because by using it in the second paragraph, we kind of define it contextually (assuming that readers can hang on for one paragraph to find out what it means). Thoughts? Mathglot (talk) 22:32, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

  • I agree with the removal of any reference to empiricism in the lead and possibly elsewhere in the article (History>Antecedents and Methodology). This is based on the less than authoritative book [1] by the non-notable, non-academic Peter Curzon, which unfortunately was used extensively in the writing of our article and also quoted verbatim in the methodology section.
  • I also agree that the notion of "social facts" in the lead may be too obscure. In the English-speaking literature on LP (mainly analytical and post-analytical jurisprudence) social facts are contrasted with (objective) moral facts, but that is not self-explanatory and obvious to the reader. So we might replace the notion that the law stemps from "social facts" with the notion that is "man-made", "artificial" or also "socially constructed", as opposed to "founded on objective morality/divine will/nature", a mantained by natural law theory.
  • Regarding Mathglot's comment that the proposed wording is very close to the first sentence of the SEP article, and may be too close for us to adopt in that form, this formulation is actually widespread and canonical in the English-speaking literature on LP. E.g. "According to legal positivism, the content of the law ultimately depends on social facts and not on moral facts" [2]. One could easily find dozens of quotations that rephrase, with slightly different words, the common idea that, according to LP, the existence and content of the law is determined by social facts and not by reference to the merits of the law. I think we should do the same. In any case, we should drop any reference to procedures for enactment as a defining feature of LP, because this is simply not the case.
Gitz (talk) (contribs) 11:21, 21 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
The expression "social fact" here is presumably derived from Raz, although it is not clear for him either. Errantios (talk) 00:10, 22 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Gitz, if that is common phraseology among multiple sources and not just SEP, then I withdraw my objection to it. It would probably help in that case, to add a second citationt, to avoid the kind of possible misunderstanding that I seem to have fallen into. Thanks for your explanation. Mathglot (talk) 07:32, 22 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

"Disputed" tag

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I have tagged the article as "Disputed". Practically everything in it is disputed. Errantios (talk) 23:31, 21 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

I've removed the tag pending consensus on this page asserting that there is disputed content in the article, let alone "practically everything" in it. Together, you and I have a mere 10% of the total content of the article to our credit; would the disputed tag you wish to add apply mostly to the other 90% of content before either of us got here? If so, what prompted you to add the tag now? Regardless, if you can justify the presence of the tag now, I would be happy to support you and restore the tag myself. Mathglot (talk) 07:26, 22 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
The history of the article, as well as its Talk page, are strewn with confusion about a supposedly discoverable definite content of "legal positivism". There has been no agreement on that ever since the label was invented and several jurists have proposed that it be abandoned. The last straw for me here was the apparent bewilderment over "social fact", which is found in many places as derived from Raz: "In the most general terms the positivist social thesis is that what is law and what is not is a matter of social fact.": The Authority of Law (1979), 37. Those who have not seen that passage will not also have seen Raz's starting point: "The perennial and inexhaustible nature of the controversy concerning the positivist analysis of the law is due in no small measure to the elusive meaning of 'positivism' in legal philosophy." (ibid). Raz attempts to end this controversy in a merely stipulative way, which could succeed only if it attracted consensus and I do not think that, as a fact, it has. The term has been (as he says) and remains contested. Therefore I am restoring the tag and hope you will now agree that it is justified. Errantios (talk) 12:18, 22 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Nobody sees any confusion but you, and there is no "bewilderment" whatever about the term social fact among editors here, nor any assertion that is isn't widely used, so that's a misreading on your part. There was a collegial discussion about how best to present technical terms such as social fact hat might require some background to understand to naive readers, and whether it was appropriate to use that term in the first sentence or not; various ideas were discussed. When there is an evolution or disagreement in the meaning of a term among scholars, then we cover that in the article. Differences from Hobbes to Bentham and Austin, to Kelsen, Hart, and Raz are adequately covered in my opinion, but if you disagree, then just add more information to the article about it. Add a whole section called "The elusive meaning of positivism" if you want to, but adding a {{disputed}} tag to the article is not the correct way to signal to the reader that authorities in the field have different views about it. As to your last sentence: the proper procedure for resolution of differences is not: 1) "I am restoring the tag" followed by 2) "hope you will now agree", it is get agreement first, and then restore the tag, and you know this full well, so what are you doing? I've left you an edit-warring notice on your Talk page. Please remove the disputed tag until you achieve consensus for it. Thanks, Mathglot (talk) 16:50, 22 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
I maintain the view expressed above, having given reasons for it, and therefore will not remove the tag. (I understand "dispute" in this context to mean lively disagreement, which can be productive.)
"Legal positivism" is a contested label: but there is a superficial dispute here as to whether this is so. That dispute is blocking discussion, also containing disputes, of the deeper and really interesting issue: what are the viewpoints in the contest.
However, since my own published viewpoint is on the brink of becoming an element of that contest—and a forthcoming publication may make it more so—I am withdrawing from discussion of this article, owing to that impending COI. Errantios (talk) 05:49, 23 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
I understand that you still maintain the same view you expressed above, but that's why we have dispute resolution techniques, of which WP:BRD is one. Simply reiterating that you believe your own arguments are correct and conclusive and acting on it by reinserting your preferred content, fails to take into consideration that there are opposing viewpoints and is contrary to one of the most basic tenets of Wikipedia, which is the use of collegial collaboration and the use of discussion to achieve consensus. If every editor simply insisted on their view as the correct one and edit-warred to support it, there would be chaos. Please reconsider, revert your edit, and discuss your reasoning here.
Regarding your forthcoming article: should you wish to declare a COI, there are two aspects to it, typically a disclosure on your user page (template {{UserboxCOI}} is available for this) and on the talk page of affected articles (e.g., with the {{connected contributor}} template). Mathglot (talk) 08:01, 23 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Also, I should add that even a confirmed COI does not bar or even discourage you from adding your views on the Talk page; the guidance applies only to article page edits. So feel free to contribute here on the Talk page, even if you declare a COI. Mathglot (talk) — Preceding undated comment added 10:56, 24 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
This tag is for content that is "verifiably wrong". This is not the case in this article, or at least, there is no specific evidence of "verifiability wrong" content that would support this template, so I have removed it again from the article. Mathglot (talk) — Preceding undated comment added 11:36, 5 July 2024 (UTC)Reply