`Austin's Positivism': Is it a Retrospective Investigation of Contractualist's Sovereign? Locating Hobbes' Theory in the History of "Sovereign's Debate"

Prabhakar Singh, National Law Institute University, Bhopal, India

A GJ Topics article.

Abstract

Legal positivism is the Jurisprudential debate, which is primarily located with the writings of Austin, which gained ground after his death. This theory is all about keeping law separate from morals, with certain explanation to sovereign, laws, society, normativity et al. But long before Austin it was Thomas Hobbes who gave his explanations to the theory of sovereign, nature of law, morality and power. But he has been kept at bay; termed as a ``political Scientist", in the manufactured tradition of legal positivism. I have tried, in this paper, to locate the proper place of Hobbes in the lineage of positivist philosophy. Secondly, I have tried to capture the debate on “Judge Made Law” as “inherently paradoxical” by supplying examples two examples--one borrowed and one mine in the second half of the paper.

Originally published in Global Jurist Topics.

Recommended Citation

Singh, Prabhakar (2006) "`Austin's Positivism': Is it a Retrospective Investigation of Contractualist's Sovereign? Locating Hobbes' Theory in the History of "Sovereign's Debate"," Global Jurist Topics: Vol. 6 : Iss. 2, Article 1.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/gj/topics/vol6/iss2/art1

 
 
 
 

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