Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Enforcement of Morals

Rate this book
Seven essays delivered as lectures in Britain and U.S.A.

156 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1987

5 people are currently reading
119 people want to read

About the author

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
9 (16%)
4 stars
12 (22%)
3 stars
23 (42%)
2 stars
7 (12%)
1 star
3 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Rick.
22 reviews
August 14, 2015
More descriptive than prescriptive, "The Enforcement of Morals" is a good practical assessment of how societies make, change, and apply laws, and how - in the secular world - the words of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. are more true than not: "The felt necessities of the time, the prevalent moral and political theories, intuitions of public policy, avowed or unconscious, even the prejudices which judges share with their fellow-men, have had a good deal more to do than the syllogism in determining the rules by which men should be governed." (The Common Law, Lecture One )

Profile Image for Steven.
Author 4 books33 followers
Read
January 15, 2025
This essay is a great proof against the separation of church and state, as well as all Western Christianity. You can't make the necessary moves to ensure decency under Protestantism and alleged neutrality. You have too much nonsense junking up the minds of people that has to be stepped around to afford state enacted punitive corrective action.

Hypothetically, you could use nation-building tactics to herd cats in your union of egoists, but that consensus rigging has no legitimating basis outside of midwit prattle like "social contract" theory (/social proofing).

Symphonia is the only defensible societal program to address the issues since the Catholic confessional state concept is basically abandoned. Even if it still had purchase, it'd still be a distant second given the consolidation of power in their ecclesiology, which stands as a barrier to consistently delivering the proper functionality. The decentralized "flatter" structure of the Orthodox Church prevents such easy capture. In some sense it's more of a 1/n investment strategy vs strictly investing in real estate.

Lastly, the concept of Sobornost would've dealt with 90% of the issues addressed in this essay, but the individualism of the author - and the expected audience - don't permit such concepts.
Profile Image for Nat.
112 reviews12 followers
January 31, 2024
Definitely an academic-type read. He goes through considerations for when creating a new law, which was interesting to read about. Overall, it was an interesting discussion on how morality ties in with the law, how this ties in with an individual's personal freedoms and on points for how interwoven morality and law should be.
1 review
January 12, 2024
Like others have said, this is a very descriptive text. The takes Devlin does express feel outdated and difficult to come around to.
Profile Image for Trisha Mukartihal.
146 reviews3 followers
Read
June 7, 2024
hard to rate because it was an academic read (especially because devlin is very outdated), but super interesting takes
Profile Image for Adrian Buck.
307 reviews66 followers
August 27, 2016
"So in a democracy the existing laws contain the best and most comprehensive statement of contemporary social reality. They are not a perfect statement. There is always some unrepealed junk that nobody will make the effort to get rid of. Moreover, of its nature the law cannot be immediately responsive to new developments and may need as a corrective the observation of the man up aloft who gauges the strength and direction of the winds of change...until the point is reached when there is strong pressure against a particular law, the ideas of reformers, however well and articulately expressed, are not contemporary sociable reality but wishful thinking about the sort of society they would like to see; and if and when they become contemporary, it is improbable that they take the exact form of the wishful thoughts." pg 126

As a judge, I suppose Patrick Devlin saw himself as a 'man up aloft'. As such was able to come out in support of the decriminalisation of homosexuality, having argued so cogently against it in this book. Devlin's view of the relationship between the law and popular morality had not changed, his view of popular morality had. 'The Enforcement of Morals' is the most compelling thing I have read in jurisprudence since Law's Empire, and it addresses an important weakness in Dworkin's argument. That argument is that Law, or at least a legal system based on precedent is an autonomous system that works over time to make itself rational. The autonomy of the law thus renders us its subjects. The view fails to take into account revolution, where Law's subjects violently change the law to better suit contemporary social reality. Devlin's linkage between popular morality and criminal law recognises that for law to be accepted as such, it must be supported by a important element of popular morality.

There are at least two examples where this process is at work today: implementing Brexit in the UK, and restrictions on Islamic dress in France. Rational, liberal arguments about the sovereignty of Parliament in the UK, and the sovereignty of the individual in France seem confused and contradictory when confronted by intense expressions of popular morality. As a Conservative with little sense of conviction on either matter, my clearest hope is that the men and women up aloft gauge correctly, avoid revolution and preserve Law's Empire.
Profile Image for Emily Kidd.
380 reviews
March 26, 2016
Pretty good, read as the second book for my intro into poli sci class under Tony Litherland. See seven page book review for extended comments.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.