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Holmes and Laski on natural lawRice, Mary Craig January 1962 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University. / Using the two volumes of the Helmes-Laski Correspondence, published by Harvard and edited by Mark DeWolfe Howe, as one of its principal sources, this dissertation examines the circumstances leading up to the publication of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes' essay, Natural Law in the Harvard Law Review in November, 1918, when Harold J. Laski was its editor. From this focus several lines of inquiry expand, developing from the two major questions of the dissertation: 1) What is Natural Law? and 2) How significant, profound and pertinent were Holmes' and Laski's contribution to the theory of Natural Law, the validity of which they denied?
A last chapter examines the co-fusions in Laski's connecting together the plural sovereignty with the personality of associations theories -- ideas he apparently gathered from Otto Gierke. Gierke's position is analyzed directly from his writings, with the conclusion that he was unclear in his own formulations, and that Laski was even more unclear in what he thought Gierke said. Reasons for the vitiation of Laski's work are analyzed, and in summary his frustrations are stressed, while Holmes' great accomplishment within the framework of his own creative inconsistencies is forcefully stated.
The conclusion of the whole is that no matter what they said they believed both Holmes and Laski lived and worked as though they believed in Natural Law.
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A dynamics theory of justice : Nietzsche, Holmes, and self-organizing criticalityBraithwaite, Murray James 05 1900 (has links)
Problem: Although Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. transformed American jurisprudence into critical
self-awareness, there is no consensus on the nature of his legal theory. Holmes imperfectly
represents each of several incompatible approaches. Commentators presume Holmes lacked any
original or coherent theory of justice.
Friedrich Nietzsche is likewise presumed a critical philosopher without a coherent theory
of justice. Nietzsche wrote esoterically, but there is no consensus on the content of his esoteric
agenda. Nietzsche's attitudes toward women appear misogynistic, but his philosophy paradoxically
appeals to many feminists.
Method: By re-conceptualizing Holmes and Nietzsche in terms of the principles of self-organized
criticality, their understandings of causation and developmental dynamics become coherent. This
thesis re-conceptualizes common-law legal reasoning as exploiting principles of self-organized
criticality to build knowledge inductively. This reveals that Holmes and Nietzsche's genealogical
critique of idealism rests on the computational implausibility of assuming there always exist microlevel
rules to achieve desired macro-level goals. The legal-reasoning model shows that justice
entails an inexhaustible open-system dynamic of applying limited resources to accommodate better
an ever-broadening matrix of conflicting values. Nietzsche assesses psychological and social
conditions that foster this collective creativity and decadent conditions that inhibit the growth of
justice. Nietzsche identifies problems specific to institutions that require special safeguards that he
esoterically conceals. Using Nietzsche's exoteric accounts of psychology and rhetoric based on
principles of self-organized criticality, Nietzsche's esoteric techniques can be inferred, including
his syncretism of pagan myths, which reveals his esoteric content.
Conclusion: Holmes and Nietzsche applied a coherent theory of justice based on principles of
causation and dynamics not widely accepted until the late twentieth century but having roots in
ancient myths and isolated prior thinkers. Nietzsche defines justice as pursuing robust community
growth without sacrificing the future for the present. Both Holmes and Nietzsche accord pursuit of
justice with the good life whereby individuals promote their own development for greater sacrifice
for the community. Nietzsche's esoteric solution to his problem of institutions was matriarchy.
Nietzsche's matriarchy follows from his identification of the root of the institutional problem as
male windfall opportunism, an evolved unconscious male tendency resulting from uncertainty over
genetic parentage.
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A dynamics theory of justice : Nietzsche, Holmes, and self-organizing criticalityBraithwaite, Murray James 05 1900 (has links)
Problem: Although Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. transformed American jurisprudence into critical
self-awareness, there is no consensus on the nature of his legal theory. Holmes imperfectly
represents each of several incompatible approaches. Commentators presume Holmes lacked any
original or coherent theory of justice.
Friedrich Nietzsche is likewise presumed a critical philosopher without a coherent theory
of justice. Nietzsche wrote esoterically, but there is no consensus on the content of his esoteric
agenda. Nietzsche's attitudes toward women appear misogynistic, but his philosophy paradoxically
appeals to many feminists.
Method: By re-conceptualizing Holmes and Nietzsche in terms of the principles of self-organized
criticality, their understandings of causation and developmental dynamics become coherent. This
thesis re-conceptualizes common-law legal reasoning as exploiting principles of self-organized
criticality to build knowledge inductively. This reveals that Holmes and Nietzsche's genealogical
critique of idealism rests on the computational implausibility of assuming there always exist microlevel
rules to achieve desired macro-level goals. The legal-reasoning model shows that justice
entails an inexhaustible open-system dynamic of applying limited resources to accommodate better
an ever-broadening matrix of conflicting values. Nietzsche assesses psychological and social
conditions that foster this collective creativity and decadent conditions that inhibit the growth of
justice. Nietzsche identifies problems specific to institutions that require special safeguards that he
esoterically conceals. Using Nietzsche's exoteric accounts of psychology and rhetoric based on
principles of self-organized criticality, Nietzsche's esoteric techniques can be inferred, including
his syncretism of pagan myths, which reveals his esoteric content.
Conclusion: Holmes and Nietzsche applied a coherent theory of justice based on principles of
causation and dynamics not widely accepted until the late twentieth century but having roots in
ancient myths and isolated prior thinkers. Nietzsche defines justice as pursuing robust community
growth without sacrificing the future for the present. Both Holmes and Nietzsche accord pursuit of
justice with the good life whereby individuals promote their own development for greater sacrifice
for the community. Nietzsche's esoteric solution to his problem of institutions was matriarchy.
Nietzsche's matriarchy follows from his identification of the root of the institutional problem as
male windfall opportunism, an evolved unconscious male tendency resulting from uncertainty over
genetic parentage. / Law, Peter A. Allard School of / Graduate
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