• Asignatura: Historia
  • Autor: kanheibandha
  • hace 4 años

The rules of man and woman are :

Respuestas

Respuesta dada por: andress112s
0

Respuesta:In this very short essay, for a Festschrift edition of the Hague Journal on the Rule of Law dedicated to Professor Martin Krygier, I take as a point of departure some observations on the opposite of the ideal of the rule of law, i.e. the much-maligned concept of the “rule of men [and women]”. By reflecting upon this counter-ideal, I hope to discern some aspects of the ideal of the rule of law itself. By proceeding in the teleological spirit of Krygier’s rule-of-law oeuvre, I intend to ascertain what it is that is truly objectionable about the counter-ideal. Or perhaps it is not that objectionable, after all? This aspect of my argument is modelled on “devil’s advocate” reasoning. Having discerned the only interpretation of the counter-ideal of the “rule of men and women” which is serious and objectionable at the same time (namely, producing Hayekian coercion), I propose a way of addressing the harm discerned in this counter-ideal (namely, that legal coercion should be always based on public reasons), and in this way, contribute to our thinking about the ideal of the rule of law itself.

Keywords: rule of law, public reason, Martin Krygier, Friedrich A Hayek, Thomas Nagel

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