Hobbes, Holmes, and Dewey: Pragmatism and the Problem of Order

Contemporary Pragmatism 7 (2):1-14 (2010)
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Abstract

Civil wars in England and America were catalysts in forming the jurisprudential views of Thomas Hobbes and Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. Holmes's pragmatism advances a fundamentally distinct view of order from Hobbes's analytical theory. Holmes replaced the Hobbesian analytical model of law with an endogenous model that assimilates conflict in a process of formal but communal inquiry into discrete types of dispute. Holmes rejected the analytical boundary around law in favor of a holistic fallibilism, which like Dewey's encompasses all inquiry, legal, scientific, aesthetic, and philosophical, under one ontological roof. Holmes also provided a practical critique of ideology, best known from the words of his famous dissent in Lochner v. New York: “The fourteenth amendment does not enact Mr. Herbert Spencer's Social Statics”; or, more to the point, “General propositions do not decide concrete cases.”

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Author's Profile

Frederic Kellogg
Universidade Federal de Pernambuco

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References found in this work

Taking Rights Seriously.Ronald Dworkin - 1979 - Mind 88 (350):305-309.
Legal reasoning and legal theory.Neil MacCormick (ed.) - 1978 - New York: Oxford University Press.
Taking Rights Seriously.Alan R. White - 1977 - Philosophical Quarterly 27 (109):379-380.

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