In
attempting to garner an understanding of the nature of law, early legal
philosophers and academics formulated what has come to be known as the natural
law theory, and has become a literal cornerstone of the development of modern
legal thinking. Although somewhat
limited in modern jurisprudential thinking, natural law has had a tremendous
impact on our understanding of what law means in society as a baseline from
which to build more complex theories. In
this article, we will look at some of the major propositions underpinning the
concept of natural law, and the corresponding strengths and weaknesses of this
fundamental interpretation of the legal function.
Natural law
starts with the basic premise that the law is driven by morality, and
consequently is affected by it. With a
history extending back to Aristotle and other early philosophers, the natural
law theory has traditionally linked the law with religion and an innate sense
of justice, rather than the more pragmatic approaches of some other
theories. Although this might sound
rather basic, the principals have been developed and refined through academic
debate for centuries ultimately leading to a far more sophisticated theory of
the nature of law. The idea that all law
is subject to an unwritten code of morality is fundamental to natural law. This also throws up some potential problems
in terms of civil regulation. Certain
natural law theorists suggest that for a law to be binding on the citizen, it
must conform to this sense of natural justice.
However, there is clearly no definitive objective concept of morality,
which casts doubt over this principle.
Additionally, the prospect that a law may be disregarded in favor of
some higher sense of morality doesn't conform in reality, considering the
potential implications of consistently disregarding law on the grounds of the
subjective concept of justice.
Furthermore
on this primitive understanding of natural law, the citizen in contravention to
the laws of his state, could attempt to excuse his actions through a
justification of 'immoral' laws. This
would also create a state of disorder, given the natural variation of personal
opinions, which would ultimately render society unworkable. For this reason, the natural law scheme has
failed to garner modern academic acceptance, of course with a few exceptions.
Natural law
has been proposed as a consideration in trying war criminals, on the basis of
the retro spectivity principle, i.e. no man can be tried for a crime that was
not a crime when he committed it. Many
war criminals are merely cogs in the machine of a legal regime, which
ultimately permits their actions, however unjustifiable morally. Natural law theories give a basis for
challenge on these grounds, whilst avoiding the awkward question of direct
legal contravention, which ultimately works to serve justice. In this sense, it is perhaps useful as a
canon of interpretation and in determining just and equitable outcomes in
'difficult' cases. However, as a wider
legal concept, natural law and the proposed intersection between law and
morality seems too awkward to reconcile with considered academic legal
understandings. Having said that,
natural law has provided an excellent starting position for further advanced
argumentation, and has provided a platform for critique that has been essential
to the development of the more sophisticated ideas held in regard in this
modern day.
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