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LJU4801 - Legal Philosophy summary notes for exam preparations

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LJU4801 - Legal Philosophy summary notes for exam preparations

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Pre-Modern Legal Philosophies


What is the meaning of natural law?

 The idea that there is a real, pre-political set of rules that provide the yardstick
against which human laws can be measured
 Natural law is a metaphysical concept (not something physical)
 Cannot be touched, seen or measured



What is the meaning of the common good?

 Here the assumption is that the community is more important than the individual
 Terms such as “human rights” are inappropriate for this type of thinking
 Idea of individual rights being in conflict with the interests of the group is
unthinkable



What is the meaning metaphysics?

 Metaphysical assumptions led to the development of the theory of natural law
 Metaphysical ideas include beliefs in ghosts, devils and Gods
 Ideas of reality beyond the physical meant a separate set of laws exist
metaphysically



What is the meaning of natural order?

 There is a natural order or natural harmony that applies to social life and the law
 In legal thinking, the hierarchical structure of these societies were never questioned
and were justified (Nazi’s, Apartheid)
 This meant that laws were often regarded as being beyond criticism
 If your laws are from natural order and your order comes from God, then criticism of
laws is indirect criticism of God



The Greek philosophers

Plato

 Ideas on law and nature of justice are linked to his theory of knowledge
 He wanted to understand how we tell what is true and what is false

,  His famous story of the cave: Imagine a group of prisoners tied up in a cave in a way that
they can only look at the wall in front of them
 Behind them a fire is burning
 Between them and the fire things are moving fast creating shadows on the walls
 Therefore prisoners only see the shadows, they do not see the “real things”
 Everything we see are the shadows of real things (ideas/ideologies)
 He thought our senses were not always reliable (sometimes we think something happened,
but was just a dream)
 He believed we could not trust our subjective senses - sight, smell and touch



 According to him, political power should be exclusive to philosophers because only they
know the eternal idea of good
 Important for everyone to have a specific role in the state
 You were either a philosopher-king, a warrior or a worker
 If you were born a worker, you never became anything else, your role in society and within
the state was set down for eternity
 This is because your station in life was determined by the natural order and no one could
argue with that
 Was even worse for women: expected to bare children and obey
 His ideas of predetermined rules and laws meant change and transformation was not
possible
 He equated change with chaos and decay
 He thought that there had to be something that never changes
 This is the reason of Eternal Forms in Plato’s theory- in the metaphysical world of forms
nothing ever changes
 Tried to give us a fixed, unchanging set of rules by which we can measure whether a specific
law is a good law or not (this gave a sense of certainty in the world)
 Plato’s theory of the ideals can be seen in the hierarchical nature of his ideal city



 Essentialism: the viewpoint that objects or ideas have an innate, unchanging core of
meaning
 For example, “justice” means exactly the same in 21st century Africa as it did in Greece more
than 2 thousand years ago
 Evident Plato developed a natural law theory in which ideals form the natural law
 This form of natural law is known as idealism
 What is idealism? The idea that human laws should be measured against ideals of justice
(which is universal and absolute standard)



Aristotle

 He was also trying to find answers to the nature of reality and how do we know
 Plato’s theory characterised by idealism whereas Aristotle’s thinking can be called Realism

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