,LJU4801 October November Portfolio 2025 - Due
Date 28 October 2025; 100 % TRUSTED workings,
Expert Solved, Explanations and Solutions.
Introduction
Nelson Mandela’s 1962 court statement — “the whole life of
any thinking African … drives him continuously to a conflict
between his conscience on the one hand and the law on the
other” — is a compact and powerful claim about the moral
status of law and the duty of conscience. To place Mandela’s
pronouncement in the landscape of legal philosophy we must
(1) outline the central debate about the relationship between
law and morality; (2) sketch the main positions and key
arguments (natural law, legal positivism, Dworkinian moral
reading, Hart–Fuller and Radbruch-type responses); (3) explain
theories of civil disobedience and conscience; and (4) situate
Mandela’s statement within those debates and evaluate its
force against common objections.
1. The central debate: Are law and morality separable?
At the heart of legal philosophy is a dispute about whether the
validity of law depends on its moral content.
Natural law tradition (classical — e.g. Aquinas — and
modern variants such as Finnis): law is connected to
morality. Extremely unjust laws are not true law in the
, fullest sense; an immoral command lacks the claim that
law properly warrants. Natural law theories ground legal
obligation in moral reasons and often allow that there can
be a moral duty to disobey unjust laws.
Legal positivism (e.g. John Austin, H.L.A. Hart): law is a
social fact — commands backed by sanctions, or rules
identified by a rule of recognition — separable from
morality. The “separability thesis” says there is no
necessary conceptual connection between law and
morality: what the law is can be identified without
recourse to moral criteria. Positivists generally accept that
laws may be morally objectionable but insist that their
legal validity is determined by institutional facts.
Variants and refinements:
o Inclusive positivism allows that moral criteria may be
part of a community’s rule of recognition (i.e. moral
considerations can be legally decisive if the legal
system so provides).
o Exclusive positivism denies this possibility — legal
validity is never a matter of moral correctness.
Ronald Dworkin / Law as integrity: Dworkin rejects
positivism’s sharp separation. He argues law consists of
principles as well as rules and that judges interpret legal
practice in light of political morality (rights and principles).
Date 28 October 2025; 100 % TRUSTED workings,
Expert Solved, Explanations and Solutions.
Introduction
Nelson Mandela’s 1962 court statement — “the whole life of
any thinking African … drives him continuously to a conflict
between his conscience on the one hand and the law on the
other” — is a compact and powerful claim about the moral
status of law and the duty of conscience. To place Mandela’s
pronouncement in the landscape of legal philosophy we must
(1) outline the central debate about the relationship between
law and morality; (2) sketch the main positions and key
arguments (natural law, legal positivism, Dworkinian moral
reading, Hart–Fuller and Radbruch-type responses); (3) explain
theories of civil disobedience and conscience; and (4) situate
Mandela’s statement within those debates and evaluate its
force against common objections.
1. The central debate: Are law and morality separable?
At the heart of legal philosophy is a dispute about whether the
validity of law depends on its moral content.
Natural law tradition (classical — e.g. Aquinas — and
modern variants such as Finnis): law is connected to
morality. Extremely unjust laws are not true law in the
, fullest sense; an immoral command lacks the claim that
law properly warrants. Natural law theories ground legal
obligation in moral reasons and often allow that there can
be a moral duty to disobey unjust laws.
Legal positivism (e.g. John Austin, H.L.A. Hart): law is a
social fact — commands backed by sanctions, or rules
identified by a rule of recognition — separable from
morality. The “separability thesis” says there is no
necessary conceptual connection between law and
morality: what the law is can be identified without
recourse to moral criteria. Positivists generally accept that
laws may be morally objectionable but insist that their
legal validity is determined by institutional facts.
Variants and refinements:
o Inclusive positivism allows that moral criteria may be
part of a community’s rule of recognition (i.e. moral
considerations can be legally decisive if the legal
system so provides).
o Exclusive positivism denies this possibility — legal
validity is never a matter of moral correctness.
Ronald Dworkin / Law as integrity: Dworkin rejects
positivism’s sharp separation. He argues law consists of
principles as well as rules and that judges interpret legal
practice in light of political morality (rights and principles).