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Legal Objectivity and the Illusion of Legal PrinciplesLarry AlexanderUniversity of San Diego School of Law August 18, 2008 RIGHTS, LAW AND MORALITY: THEMES FROM THE LEGAL PHILOSOPHY OF ROBERT ALEXY, M. Klatt, ed., Oxford University Press, 2009 San Diego Legal Studies Paper No. 08-069 Abstract: In this essay I approach the topic of legal objectivity by analyzing law's possible relationships with morality, rules, standards, and principles. I argue that law's function is to settle moral controversies, which renders problematic law's incorporation of morality and points to the moral desirability of determinate rules, even though such rules will conflict with morality. I argue that legal rules can be objective. On the other hand, I deny that there are any norms that can play the role that so-called "legal principles" are said to play, whether in Dworkin's account of them or in Alexy's.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 30 Keywords: objectivity, rules, standards, principles, morality, settlement JEL Classification: K00, K10 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: August 27, 2008 ; Last revised: September 10, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
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