Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Law & Morality
- Definitions
- Law
- Rules of state
that govern our
lives
- Punishable
by sanctions
- Morality
- Principles concerning the
distinction between right
and wrong behaviour
- No identifiable origin as morals
are developed over time
- Conduct is practised by a majority
- Value is attached to
the behaviour (how
people do/should
behave)
- Adherence to
conduct is public
judgement
- Failure to do so
leads to a
damaged
reputation
- Enforcement is by social
disapproval rather than by
formal sanction
- Anomie: a term used by
Durkheim to describe the
breakdown in society that can
occur when traditional norms of
behaviour disintegrate
- Legal Positivism
- Laws are valid where they are made by the
recognised legislative power in the state; they do not
have to satisfy any higher authority
- John Austin
- Believed that once laws are made that they are
binding upon people, whatever the morality of their
content
- E.g. We usually follow laws
whether we like them or not
- Developed the Command Theory of Law
- law is a command from a
sovereign reinforced by a
sanction
- Usually obey by
habit to avoid being
punished
- H.L.A Hart
- Often criticised Austin as it is difficult to identify
sovereign law
- Insisted on law and morality
being separate
- the validity of a law is not dependent
upon its moral acceptability
- Developed a more sophisticated model
- Primary Rules: impose legal
obligations or grant powers
- Secondary Rules: concerned with the
operation of primary legal rules
- 1) Rules of Recognition: Sets criteria to identify
primary rules (Acts of Parliament)
- 2) Rules of change:
states how legal rules can
be formed, amended or
repealed
- 3) Rules of adjudication:
Enables the courts to settle
disputes and interpret the law
- For this system to work, people in general
must be in the habit of obeying the primary
rules and public officials must accept the
rules of recognition, change and
adjudication
- Natural Law
- Higher authority to which
man-made law must conform
in order to be valid
- The validity of man-made laws
depend upon their compatibility
with higher, moral authority
- Thomas Aquinas
- Explanation of four
different types of law
- Eternal Law
- Governs everything in the universe E.g. Gravity
- Includes general
moral rules of
conduct
- Devine Law
- The standards to
which humans must
conform in order to
attain salvation
- Removes need for humans to
be in doubt about moral rules
E.g. Ten Commandments
- Natural Law
- Derived from eternal law, deals
with general rules of conduct that
govern the behaviour of humans
- 'Do good, avoid evil'
- Human Law
- Derived from natural law by applying
principles (geographical, historical
and social circumstances)
- Differ from society to society
- Lack validity where they fail to
conform to a higher authority
- Lon Fuller
- Discussed
connection
between law &
morality
- Rejected legal positivism,
believes law is
earth-based and that law
has a purpose
- Purpose to achieve social order
through subjecting people's
conduct to the guidance of general
rules by which they may
themselves orient their beaviour
- Inner Morality of Law
- describes the 8 principles
adopted by Fuller. Laws
must satisfy these principles
otherwise the legal system
lacks validity
- 1) in existence 2) published 3) prospective
4) comprehensible 5) consistent 6) possible
to obey 7) constant 8) applied as stated
- Hart criticises Fuller and states he confuses efficiency of
the legal system with morality
- Characteristics of legal
and moral rules
- Origins
- Laws can be traced
back to their origin,
either Parliament or a
judicial decision
- Example: occupiers' liability
law changed in British
Railways Board v Herrington
- Morals are difficult to trace back
but often goes back to religious
teachings
- Example: Ten
Commandments, upbringing,
peer views or a person's own
conscience
- Date of Commencement
- Legal rules have a start date
- Moral rules develop over time
- Attitudes to pre-marital sex
- Enforcement
- Legal rules are governed by sanctions
- Moral rules can include
exclusions from groups or
social disapproval
- Ease to Change
- Parliament is often slow to
respond to change and public
pressure
- Morals change over
a long period of time
- Example: attitudes
to smoking due to
health warnings
- Certainty of Content
- Legal offences require
actus reus and mens
rea elements, any
changes are reported
but confusion occurs
when there is an
unclear precedent
- Example:
Brown (1993)
and Wilson
(1996)
- Morals are often clear
- E.g. table manners
- Application of the Rules
- Legal rules
apply to
everyone
- Moral rules range
in application
depending on
peoples opinion
- Stem cell
research,
assisted
suicide and
gay
adoption
- Hart-Devlin Debate
- Relationship
between Law &
Morality
- Coincidence of legal & moral Rules
- Influence upon each other
- Enforcement
of Morality
- John Stuart Mill