This semester in my philosophy of law class, I’ve begun the semester with a pair of class sessions devoted to ancient law: Mesopotamian, Biblical, and Roman. (My class is reading excerpts from a standard law school textbook: Jurisprudence Cases and Materials: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Law and Its Applications by
These considerations offer a series of compelling arguments for why the study of ancient law should be included in a philosophy of law course; the description of law as a historically evolving and contingent technology of governance is one that every student of law–philosophical or otherwise–should be familiar with. (I regret never having including these sorts of materials in my previous iterations of this class; philosophy of law anthologies for their part, do not include material on ancient law.) If today’s vigorous class discussion–on a preliminary reading of the laws of Ur-Namma, Lipit-Ishtar, Hammurabi, and Yahdun-Lim was any indication, this syllabus selection has been a hit with my students as well. My students were particularly enthused by an introductory exercise that asked them to write a prologue, a few laws, and a conclusion in the style of these legislators; we then discussed why they picked the prologue and the laws that they did; this discussion allowed me to introduce the concept of the ‘expressive impact of law’ and also the so-called four-fold model of behavioral modification, which shows that law is but one modality by which behavior can be modified (the others are social norms, market pressures, and architectural constraints.) Moreover, these legislative excerpts are written in a very distinctive style, which permitted a preliminary discussion of legal rhetoric as well.
I often get syllabi wrong; and much remains to be done in this semester, but for the time being I’m reasonably pleased that this class–which sputtered so spectacularly last year–is off to a bright start in this new year. Hope springs eternal.
Very nice piece Samir, and, I think, an excellent argument for using historical sources. I’ve taken the liberty to forward it to a friend who teaches philosophy of law in the Law School of UMKC, and to another friend who’s a retired DOJ prosecutor (Georgetown law grad), both of whom will appreciate your argument.
best,
g
From: Samir Chopra
Reply-To: Samir Chopra
Date: Wednesday, January 31, 2018 at 9:23 PM
To: “Gale, George”
Subject: [New post] Studying Ancient Law In Philosophy Of Law
Samir Chopra posted: “This semester in my philosophy of law class, I’ve begun the semester with a pair of class sessions devoted to ancient law: Mesopotamian, Biblical, and Roman. (My class is reading excerpts from a standard law school textbook: Jurisprudence Cases and Materi”
George, thanks for the comment, and thanks too for forwarding my post on to your friends. Much appreciated. Yes, indeed, more history all around. Those perspectives have always helped my classes, and I’m surprised I did not see the need for this earlier in this particular class.