H. L. A. Hart made a famous claim that legal positivism somehow involves a "separation of law and morals." This Article seeks to clarify and assess this claim, contending that Hart's separability thesis should not be confused with the social thesis, the sources thesis, or a methodological thesis about jurisprudence. In contrast, Hart's separability thesis denies the existence of any necessary conceptual connections between law and morality. That thesis, however, is false: There are many necessary connections between law and morality, some of them conceptually significant. Among them is an important negative connection: Law is, of its nature, morally fallible and morally risky. Lon Fuller emphasized what he called the "internal morality of l...
In chapter one we consider H.L.A Hart\u27s attempt to advance legal theory by providing an improved...
Hart believes that one truism of human nature is that the overwhelming majority of human beings wish...
This thesis defends a unified theory of morality and law: the one-system view or the normative conti...
The problem of the relationship between law and morality looms large since the dawn of analytic juri...
The essay discusses the import of the separability thesis both for legal positivism and for contempo...
This article argues that the basic notions and assumptions underlying H.L.A. Hart\u27s theory of leg...
English legal positivism began with the clarity of Jeremy Bentham and John Austin, but their clarity...
textIn the postscript to The Concept of Law, H.L. A. Hart describes the on-going debate inspired by ...
This paper discusses two currently usual interpretations of Hart\u2019s work; its purpose is to asse...
It has become increasingly popular to argue that legal positivism is actually a normative theory, an...
In this article, the author argues that H.L.A. Hart's legal positivism is ultimately self-subverting...
The purpose of this paper is to examine the separability of law and morality within an ana...
According to contemporary legal positivism, law claims to create obligations. In order for law to be...
Does the law merely contain rules? Or does it also include morality? The debate between H.L.A. Hart ...
This article is primarily focused on two interconnected discussions presented by John Gardner in Law...
In chapter one we consider H.L.A Hart\u27s attempt to advance legal theory by providing an improved...
Hart believes that one truism of human nature is that the overwhelming majority of human beings wish...
This thesis defends a unified theory of morality and law: the one-system view or the normative conti...
The problem of the relationship between law and morality looms large since the dawn of analytic juri...
The essay discusses the import of the separability thesis both for legal positivism and for contempo...
This article argues that the basic notions and assumptions underlying H.L.A. Hart\u27s theory of leg...
English legal positivism began with the clarity of Jeremy Bentham and John Austin, but their clarity...
textIn the postscript to The Concept of Law, H.L. A. Hart describes the on-going debate inspired by ...
This paper discusses two currently usual interpretations of Hart\u2019s work; its purpose is to asse...
It has become increasingly popular to argue that legal positivism is actually a normative theory, an...
In this article, the author argues that H.L.A. Hart's legal positivism is ultimately self-subverting...
The purpose of this paper is to examine the separability of law and morality within an ana...
According to contemporary legal positivism, law claims to create obligations. In order for law to be...
Does the law merely contain rules? Or does it also include morality? The debate between H.L.A. Hart ...
This article is primarily focused on two interconnected discussions presented by John Gardner in Law...
In chapter one we consider H.L.A Hart\u27s attempt to advance legal theory by providing an improved...
Hart believes that one truism of human nature is that the overwhelming majority of human beings wish...
This thesis defends a unified theory of morality and law: the one-system view or the normative conti...