The problem of the relationship between law and morality looms large since the dawn of analytic jurisprudence. Earlier legal positivists reasoned to the fact that there is no connection between law and morality. But with the emergence of Hart, a new horizon opened to accommodate the inseparability of the two disciplines, namely: law and morality. Applying the methods of analysis and hermeneutics one discovers that the early legal positivists championed by the utilitarians like Jeremy Bentham, John Austin, Hans Keelson, Joseph Razz are morally arbitrary and indifferent to reality when we critically consider their no necessary connection thesis. To be sure, further discovery after analysing and interpreting Hart is his consistent view and cla...