- John Austin (legal philosopher)
John Austin (1790 - 1859) was a noted British
jurist and published extensively concerning the philosophy of law andjurisprudence .Austin served with the British Army in
Sicily andMalta , but sold his officer's commission to study law. He became a member of the Bar during 1818. He discontinued his law practice soon after, devoted himself to the study of law as a science, and became Professor of Jurisprudence in theUniversity of London (nowUniversity College London ) 1826-32. Thereafter he served on various Royal Commissions.His publications had a profound influence on English jurisprudence. They include "
The Province of Jurisprudence Determined " (1832), and "Lectures on Jurisprudence".Theories on legal positivism
The three basic points of Austin's theory of law are, that:
* the law is command issued by the uncommanded commander--the sovereign;
* such commands are backed by sanctions; and
* a sovereign is one who is habitually obeyedJohn Austin is best known for his work developing the theory of
legal positivism . He attempted to clearly separate moral rules from "positive law."Austin was greatly influenced in his
utilitarian approach to law byJeremy Bentham . Austin took a positivist approach to jurisprudence; he viewed the law as commands from a sovereign that are backed by a threat of sanction. In determining 'a sovereign', Austin recognized it as one who society obeys habitually. This of course raises problems of the sovereign-many - Parliament, comprising numerous individuals, each with varying authoritative powers. Austin's theory also falls somewhat short in his explanations of Constitutions, International Law, non-sanctioned rules, or law that "gives" rights. Insofar as non-sanctioned rules and laws that "allow" persons to do things, for instancecontract law , Austin says failure to adhere to the rules does indeed lead to sanctions, however such sanctions are in the form of "the sanction of nullity." In this way he defined law primarily in terms of the power to control others. This definition of law was criticised by the 20th century legal philosopherH. L. A. Hart , who said that it was analogous to a gunman backing up his demands with a threat of violence.Legacy
Austin greatly influenced later 20th Century thinkers, most notably "Pure Theory of Law" founder
Hans Kelsen andH.L.A. Hart who even more vigorously argued for the divorce of law and morals, attempting to defend against the accusations that legal positivism was responsible for the horror occurring inNazi Germany .References
*
* Wilfred E. Rumble, "The Thought of John Austin : Jurisprudence, Colonial Reform, and the British Constitution London" ; Dover, N.H. : Athlone Press, 1985External links
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/austin-john/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry]
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