Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2016
Publication Title
Journal of Catholic Legal Studies
Abstract
Throughout history, some have questioned whether the authority exercised by some over others is consistent with human nature. Is it possible for a law made by one human being to bind the conscience of another, or is such a claim merely tyranny? If such a power to bind to laws made by humans is justified, what is its scope? The answers to these related questions explored in this Article are both descriptive and normative. This Article explains the nature of authority and the extent of the obligation to obey the law as well as explains how the architecture of natural law jurisprudence explains and justifies both the authority and the obligation. To introduce the subject, this Article begins by offering a preliminary definition of authority and obligation. Part I then surveys some of the competing theories of authority and obligation and demonstrates their lack of an ontology and a satisfying justification. Part II presents the classical justification for legal authority and obligation.
Volume
55
First Page
83
Recommended Citation
Brian McCall, Why It Is Good To Stop At A Red Light: The Basis Of Authority And Obligation, 55 J. Cath. Legal Stud. 83 (2016).
Included in
Ethics and Political Philosophy Commons, Jurisprudence Commons, Law and Philosophy Commons, Law and Society Commons, Natural Law Commons
Comments
Brian McCall (2017) "Why Is It Good to Stop at a Red Light: The Basis of Authority and Obligation," Journal of Catholic Legal Studies: Vol. 55 : No. 1 , Article 3. Available at: http://scholarship.law.stjohns.edu/jcls/vol55/iss1/3