¿Qué es el derecho? Esta pregunta ha intrigado a algunos filósofos desde Platón, pasando por Thomas Hobbes, hasta llegar a H. L. A. Hart. Otros, sin embargo, la consideran desconcertante. ¿Cómo puede responderse una pregunta tan abstracta? ¿Qué sentido tiene hacerlo? En Legalidad, Scott Shapiro sostiene que esta pregunta no solo tiene sentido, sino que es de suma importancia. En efecto, muchos de los problemas más acuciantes que enfrentan los juristas –incluyendo quién tiene autoridad sobre nosotros o cómo deberían interpretarse las constituciones y las leyes– no pueden resolverse hasta que no se responda esta gran pregunta filosófica. Shapiro se apoya en los desarrollos más recientes de la filosofía de la acción para articular una respuesta original y convincente a esta antigua cuestión. Abandonando una larga tradición iusfilosófica, afirma que el derecho no puede ser comprendido simplemente en términos de reglas. La mejor comprensión de los sistemas jurídicos se logra cuando se los concibe como herramientas altamente sofisticadas y complejas para crear y aplicar planes. Este cambio de enfoque –de las reglas a los planes– no solo resuelve muchos de los problemas más desconcertantes en relación con la naturaleza del derecho, sino que también tiene profundas implicaciones para la práctica jurídica Scott J. Shapiro. Profesor «Charles F. Southmayd» de derecho y profesor de filosofía en la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad de Yale. Previamente, enseñó filosofía y derecho en la Universidad de Michigan, y fue profesor de la Facultad de Derecho Benjamin N. Cardozo. Sus áreas de interés incluyen la filosofía del derecho, el derecho internacional, el derecho constitucional, la filosofía de la acción y la teoría de la autoridad. Además de ser autor de Legalidad, escribió una importante cantidad de artículos sobre filosofía del derecho en las revistas más prestigiosas de este ámbito y, junto a Jules L. Coleman, editó el Oxford Handbook of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of Law (2002).
I was fortunate enough to read this very intriguing book while taking Prof. Shapiro's class, before it was published. Building upon the legal positivist tradition under whose shadow he also works, Shapiro lays out a conception of laws as social planning, based upon our ability as rational beings to plan. This avoids many of the problems that have plagued previous legal thinkers, such as the problem of legitimizing the rules made by legal authorities, as well as answering Hume's challenge of deriving ought-statements from is-statements. Perhaps the only weakness to this argument is that morality is merely one aspect of the legal planning process - in keeping with the positivist tradition, Shapiro denies that moral facts determine the content of law. However, this leaves a question of what occurs when there are gaps in the planning process or resulting legal rule. Shapiro wants to avoid the question that a quasi-natural legal philosopher such as Ronald Dworkin would answer with a resort to moral philosophy. Indeed, perhaps the largest problem with our legal system as well as our legal education is the absence of moral philosophical instruction. That aside, however, this volume represents a highly interesting contribution to the field of analytic legal philosophy, and ought to be considered a peer alongside its predecessors.
In Legality, Shapiro solves uniquely the interpretation problem. Law is a sub-type of social plan, and the interpretation of the law is the interpretation of a social plan. Considering the criticism of Ronald Dworkin, Shapiro reformulates the notion of a theoretical disagreement. The disagreement lies in methods of interpretation rather than legal texts. We can agree on the statutes but still disagree on how to interpret them. Shapiro names this disagreement as the meta-interpretation disagreement. In such disagreement, lawyers argue not about how to solve particular cases but about which method is more appropriate. Even though this disagreement is complicated, Shapiro claims plan theory has the solution. When having an argument about constitutional interpretation, such as a quarrel between originalism and living constitutionalism, we should discover how much trust the framers has distributed to the interpreters. The more trust the interpreters have, the more freedom he can have when interpreting the law. As a result, we can appeal to social facts to solve the disagreement. The problem of interpretation methods is a matter of trust.
Nevertheless, Shapiro’s plan approach fails both in descriptive and normative dimensions. In a descriptive sense, his theory incorrectly explains real disagreements among different interpretation theories. When originalists rebut Dworkin, they do not claim Dworkin’s theory wrongly comprehends the framers’ trust, but his theory overly empowers the judges and usurps democracy. Different methods justify their methods for diverse reasons. Generalizing all the disagreements into the disagreement of trust covers the broadness of this issue. Plan theory also has serious normative deficiencies. As Dworkin correctly claims, the theoretical disagreement is the disagreement of political legitimacy. If we knew the framers’ intention of trust, we would still disagree on the right interpretation because interpretation methods are closely related to the justification of our political obligations. Every interpretation method must defend its moral permissibility in the normative domain. Therefore, using Dworkin’s term, Shapiro’s plan theory is another empirical disagreement. One can still ask, we know the distribution of trust, but is it morally good?
Professor Shapiro offers a fresh account of law which allows for interesting reappraisals of the theories of all the big names of philosophy of law. According to him, law can be compared to a system of plans which societies give themselves in order to resolve disputes or simply solve problems of organization in a more efficient way. At first, this outlook on law seemed too narrow, falling into the trap of reducing the tackling of social issues to problem-solving endeavours, transforming complex social problems into economic problems. However, the way the books explains how considerations of morality are distributed through a legal system gives more of a structure for the life of the law to flourish. In sum, Legality offers a great explanation of the way law structures interpretive arguments and what he calls "meta-interpretive" arguments, i.e. disputes about what is the law in the first place. However, the importances he gives to the trust given by legislators is somewhat unsatisfying. His exercise in researching the way trust is distributed to different officials in the american legal system isn't convincing, or maybe only works in an american context. My personal impression is that there are more fundamental philosophical disagreements among judges that lead to different theories of interpretation for legal texts and trust given to judges vs. legislators is only of them.
A stupid and useless liberal planning theory. Shapiro was in the Biden admin working on AI and that's all you need to know. Read Brian Leiter, Dworkin, Pashukanis, Hart, and literally any one with a better jurisprudence concept. The book is supposed to be for students to learn law theory but his caricatures of thinkers on his and the other side of the aisle are practically useless for anyone seeking to seriously engage legal philosophy as a hobby or practice. Most theorists not in the AI scam and outside of the ivy leagues that have written on this text have highlighted it's an impractical text attempting to be theory of the quality of Hart or Austin's but lacking the rhetorical and scholarly might.
An approachable, detailed introduction to legal philosophy and defining what the law is.
I came into this not knowing anything about how to think about law, and Shapiro explains everything.
It’s interesting, and he presents his own work in a way that makes sense. A little technical ( be warned) but I think that is required to define your terms.