From Legal Positivism to Neo-Liberal Scientism
A Metaphysical Defence of Moral Law and the Inseparability Thesis Authors
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.35544/jjeoshs.v7i1.69Keywords:
Inseparability Thesis, Legal Positivism, Metaphysics, Moral Law, Neo-Liberalism, ScientismAbstract
Despite decades of contentions between moral legalists and legal positivists about the place of morality in law, moral law has vehemently stood out as the end of history. The scientific experiment has despondently failed to logically evict the moral law from the jurisprudential discourse. This research article posits that moral law is the End of History as far jurisprudential evolution is concerned. It argues that the mechanization of law through the positivistic experiment is a moral debacle dented with logical inconsistencies and insurmountable fallacies. It thus uses the inseparability thesis to demonstrate the pivotality of moral law in every positive jurisprudence superstructure. It contends that law appeals to our moral sensibilities because it pre-supposes a conscience in the law giver, the law enforcer and the citizen who is supposed to abide by the law. This ought necessity therefore makes the trio morally credible to legislate, enforce the law and be legally bound by the principles and precincts established by the law.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Like most other credible international Journals, all JJEOSHS articles are published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). To this end, our readers can adapt, transmit, copy, and distribute the work so long as the original work and source is cited or acknowledged appropriately.