Villanova University Legal Working Paper Series

Villanova University School of Law Working Paper Series

 

Locating Authority in Law, and Avoiding the Authoritarianism of 'Textualism'

Patrick McKinley Brennan, 1567

Article comments

Notre Dame Law Review, Forthcoming

Abstract

Much modern jurisprudence attempts to move the locus of authority away from people with authority in order to locate it instead, for example, in rules or texts. This article argues that authority, wherever it exists, is a quality of the actions of persons. The article mounts this argument by showing how Justice Scalia's textualism is the legal analogue of a largely discredited form of "Christian positivism," one that leads to a form of authoritarianism. The article goes on to argue that authorianism can be avoided only by individuals' and their communities' becoming authoritative, including in the making and enforcement of law. Relying on a fairly thick normative anthropology to identify what is authoritative, this article mounts a non-liberal critique of the conservative jurisprudential doctrine that lies at the core of the American cult of the Supreme Court.

Subject Area

Judges, Jurisprudence, Religion

Recommended Citation

Patrick McKinley Brennan, "Locating Authority in Law, and Avoiding the Authoritarianism of 'Textualism'" (October 2007). Villanova University Legal Working Paper Series. Villanova University School of Law Working Paper Series. Working Paper 86.
http://law.bepress.com/villanovalwps/papers/art86

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