The idea of judicial power, with special reference to Australian law

<p>The aim of this thesis is to contribute to analytical Jurisprudence by studying in depth a concept that is characteristically legal and, at the same time, both a traditional term of descriptive political analyses and familiar in ordinary non-technical usage. The concept selected for study i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Finnis, J
Format: Thesis
Published: 1965
_version_ 1826290883945824256
author Finnis, J
author_facet Finnis, J
author_sort Finnis, J
collection OXFORD
description <p>The aim of this thesis is to contribute to analytical Jurisprudence by studying in depth a concept that is characteristically legal and, at the same time, both a traditional term of descriptive political analyses and familiar in ordinary non-technical usage. The concept selected for study is "judicial power".</p> <p>The intended point of the study is fourfold: (1) to illustrate a useful method of analytical jurisprudential enquiry: (2) to discover and illustrate the types of features, problems and lessons connected with the use of legal concepts, or of theoretical or commonsense concepts in a legal context: (3) to compare the approaches of descriptive theorists and of lawyers to those problems and features , and (4) to provide thereby some concrete evidence of the distinction (or absence of distinction) between legal thought, method and system, and the thought, method and system of commonsense and the purified commonsense no of descriptive theory.</p> <p>A long introductory chapter seeks to explicate these particular aims, and to place them in the context of contemporary analytical jurisprudence. In the first place, it argues that the sharp distinction, drawn by Prof. H. L. A. Hart, between descruotive statements or "statements of fact", and legal statements or "conclusions from rules", is misleading and ought to be abandoned as a solution for the puzzle it was put forward to resolve. This argument, if correct, clears the ground for a more-or-less straightforward comparison between the "descriptive" use of the term "judicial power" by political analyst from Aristotle to modern times, and the use of the same term in "conclusions of law" arrived at by Justices if the High Court of Australia in interpreting the Australian federal Constitution. Moreover, in the course of the argument it is suggested that the general criterion of the correctness of statements, legal or otherwise, is the absence of further relevant questions that would lead to a revision of the statement, so that an analysis of the special feature of legal language should not rely on the simple distinction put forward by Hart, but should seek to identify the general and special conditions surrounding the making of correct statements in legal as compared with other realms of discourse. Several such conditions are suggested <em>a priori</em>; legal discourse is distinguished from commonsense discourse by (1) the desire for a system in affairs; (2) the need to resolve disputes by giving final answers; (3) the consequent definition of terms, and limitation on further questions; (4) the consequent possibility of authority and precedent, further limiting questions, and providing (5) an actual system of definite terms and relations on which to base a transition to more abstract concepts expressing generically various systematic relationships possible between definite terms. A conclusion of the whole thesis is that such features or conditions of legal discourse may readily be identified in the history of the Australian discussions of judicial power. </p> <p>[Please see thesis for the complete abstract.]</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T02:51:01Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:adade83d-c1fc-4d5a-b396-5813d5a93441
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-07T02:51:01Z
publishDate 1965
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:adade83d-c1fc-4d5a-b396-5813d5a934412022-03-27T03:37:21ZThe idea of judicial power, with special reference to Australian lawThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:adade83d-c1fc-4d5a-b396-5813d5a93441Polonsky Theses Digitisation Project1965Finnis, J<p>The aim of this thesis is to contribute to analytical Jurisprudence by studying in depth a concept that is characteristically legal and, at the same time, both a traditional term of descriptive political analyses and familiar in ordinary non-technical usage. The concept selected for study is "judicial power".</p> <p>The intended point of the study is fourfold: (1) to illustrate a useful method of analytical jurisprudential enquiry: (2) to discover and illustrate the types of features, problems and lessons connected with the use of legal concepts, or of theoretical or commonsense concepts in a legal context: (3) to compare the approaches of descriptive theorists and of lawyers to those problems and features , and (4) to provide thereby some concrete evidence of the distinction (or absence of distinction) between legal thought, method and system, and the thought, method and system of commonsense and the purified commonsense no of descriptive theory.</p> <p>A long introductory chapter seeks to explicate these particular aims, and to place them in the context of contemporary analytical jurisprudence. In the first place, it argues that the sharp distinction, drawn by Prof. H. L. A. Hart, between descruotive statements or "statements of fact", and legal statements or "conclusions from rules", is misleading and ought to be abandoned as a solution for the puzzle it was put forward to resolve. This argument, if correct, clears the ground for a more-or-less straightforward comparison between the "descriptive" use of the term "judicial power" by political analyst from Aristotle to modern times, and the use of the same term in "conclusions of law" arrived at by Justices if the High Court of Australia in interpreting the Australian federal Constitution. Moreover, in the course of the argument it is suggested that the general criterion of the correctness of statements, legal or otherwise, is the absence of further relevant questions that would lead to a revision of the statement, so that an analysis of the special feature of legal language should not rely on the simple distinction put forward by Hart, but should seek to identify the general and special conditions surrounding the making of correct statements in legal as compared with other realms of discourse. Several such conditions are suggested <em>a priori</em>; legal discourse is distinguished from commonsense discourse by (1) the desire for a system in affairs; (2) the need to resolve disputes by giving final answers; (3) the consequent definition of terms, and limitation on further questions; (4) the consequent possibility of authority and precedent, further limiting questions, and providing (5) an actual system of definite terms and relations on which to base a transition to more abstract concepts expressing generically various systematic relationships possible between definite terms. A conclusion of the whole thesis is that such features or conditions of legal discourse may readily be identified in the history of the Australian discussions of judicial power. </p> <p>[Please see thesis for the complete abstract.]</p>
spellingShingle Finnis, J
The idea of judicial power, with special reference to Australian law
title The idea of judicial power, with special reference to Australian law
title_full The idea of judicial power, with special reference to Australian law
title_fullStr The idea of judicial power, with special reference to Australian law
title_full_unstemmed The idea of judicial power, with special reference to Australian law
title_short The idea of judicial power, with special reference to Australian law
title_sort idea of judicial power with special reference to australian law
work_keys_str_mv AT finnisj theideaofjudicialpowerwithspecialreferencetoaustralianlaw
AT finnisj ideaofjudicialpowerwithspecialreferencetoaustralianlaw