From an earlier comment by A Texas Libertarian, one to which
I have previously referred:
Maybe we need someone to bridge the
gap between politics and culture, to define praxeologically what culture is
required to support liberty.
A project for which I am overwhelmingly underqualified, yet –
as if a gift from God – I am finding what might be some items well-applicable
to this suggestion.
Property,
Freedom, and Society: Essays in Honor of Hans-Hermann Hoppe, edited by Jörg
Guido Hülsmann and Stephan Kinsella.
The essay is entitled “Classical Natural Law and Libertarian
Theory,” by Carlo Lottieri. I will
admit: I do not fully grasp all of the concepts of which Lottieri writes, but,
perhaps, somewhere in the intersection of my writing and your further feedback,
I can make progress on this topic.
Writing of Rothbard:
But unfortunately, he does not
really grasp the function of the evolution into classic natural law. …Rothbard
seems to minimize the contextual and non-theoretical dimension of a large part
of legal controversies and especially of positive law.
Lottieri uses the term “positive law” in a manner that is
not completely clear to me – perhaps (though I am not certain) in a manner
different than it is typically understood.
As best as I can make of this: the non-aggression principle offers us a
negative law; moving from this negative law to a functioning, free society
requires something more: tradition. This
“something more” might be what Lottieri considers “positive law.”
He hints at this confused meaning of the term “positive law,”
when he writes (emphasis added): “… [Bruno] Leoni tried a sort of
reconciliation of natural law and legal realism (positive law rightly understood)…”
As if addressing the task suggested by ATL:
Using the Thomist framework, in
this essay I will emphasize the importance of the lex naturalis, at the same time highlighting a lex humana deeply rooted in the complexity of different ages and
societies, related to the subjectivity and specificity of opinions which cannot
be fruitfully examined by a praxeological approach. Many problems, and even
some inconsistencies of Rothbardian theory are a consequence of it.
Buried in here, it seems, is my struggle. To achieve a libertarian society (or a
society approaching libertarianism), is something beyond the NAP required –
specifically some culture, tradition…a “nationality principle,” as Salerno
offers from Mises?
Perhaps the issue raised by ATL is not addressable
praxeologically, as Lottieri suggests.
Perhaps it takes a different approach.
Lottieri will address this point shortly.
Referring to Carl Menger’s Investigations into the Method of the Social Sciences, Lottieri
offers:
Menger also highlights the
individualistic content of evolutionary law with the goal of helping the
classical liberal tradition to rediscover its lost roots: “law, like language,
is (at least originally) not the product in general of an activity of public
authorities aimed at producing it, nor in particular is it the product of
positive legislation. It is, instead, the
unintended result of a higher wisdom, of the historical development of the
nations.” (Emphasis added.)
As I have suggested often, you may take “a higher wisdom” to
mean God, or you may take “historical development of the nations” to mean
culture and tradition. Either is OK with
me, and neither is the same thing as “positive legislation” produced by “public
authorities.”
It is exactly in this sense that we
can understand Leoni’s preference for evolutionary law (Anglo-Saxon law and
Roman jus civile): a law not oriented
to preserve tradition or spontaneous order per
se. On the contrary, Leoni thinks that a polycentric and evolutionary order
is in a better position to safeguard individual rights.
Why is this?
Rules that emerge from the
interpersonal exchange of claims are tools that can effectively protect society
from the rulers.
A wonderfully succinct statement of the value of culture and
tradition. Absent a generally accepted
culture and tradition, all we are left with is the rulers dictating and
enforcing the rules. Absent other,
reasonably voluntary, institutions and governance structures, we are left with
one: the all-powerful state.
Now…if such cannot be demonstrated solely praxeologically,
what approach does Lottieri suggest?
In Mises’s thought, there is a
notion that is extremely useful in helping us grasp the relationship between
theory and practice in the law. In fact, in Theory
and History, he opposes praxeology to thymology, which is in close
relationship with history.
Thymology?
Thymology is a branch of history
and “derives its knowledge from historical experience.”
When ATL challenged this mosquito to tackle this issue
praxeologically, I suggested my extreme lack of qualifications – without any
real evidence on this point. Now…if
Mises says it is not so easy, well…that’s pretty good evidence.
Continuing with Mises:
This “literary psychology” is the
condition of a rational behavior: “for lack of any better tool, we must take
recourse to thymology if we want to anticipate other people’s future attitudes
and actions.”
Leoni does suggest a praxeological dimension to this, for
the most theoretical part, “coinciding with the analysis of the individual
claims and their interactions.” But there
is also the thymological dimension, “depending on experience, common opinions
and traditions.”
His idea is that positive law has a
strong relationship with customs. As practical activity, law must reduce
uncertainty…. Our behavior is led very often by the rationality of our past
experiences and by our prejudices.
Lottieri integrates Aristotle and Aquinas in his
analysis. From Aristotle, there is a law
of nature – law that is just by nature.
Citing Aquinas:
…“custom has the force of law,
abolishes law, and is the interpreter of law.” [Aquinas] accepts customary law
because it has the approval of individuals: “because, by the very fact that
they tolerate it, they seem to approve of that which is introduced by custom.”
And therefore, the role and necessity of custom and
tradition if one is to find some form of libertarian society:
For all these reasons, the Thomist
distinction between natural law and human law is fundamental, especially if by lex humana we do not conceive of the
state law, but our ever-imperfect translation, into norms, of our aspiration to
live in a just society.
Because the choice is one or the other: state law or (naturally
evolving) custom and tradition.
As Paul Sigmund correctly remarked,
“human law is the application to specific circumstances of the precepts
of reason contained in the natural law.”
There is reason in tradition.
This mediation is always
unsatisfying, but at the same time necessary.
There is much in this concept and presentation that might be
unsatisfying, especially for those who believe that all social interactions can
be resolved via ever-increasing purification of the NAP applied. But, humans being…human…we might accept that perfection in neither theory nor law is
possible.
Leoni perceives the importance of
the positive law, also in a
libertarian and anti-statist perspective.
…the intellectual heritage of Leoni
can be useful in the attempt to develop a libertarian legal theory aiming to
protect the dignity and freedom of the individual.
Conclusion
In spite of his positivism, Leoni
can help us grasp the true nature of classical natural law, because he does not
prospect for a “libertarian code” like the one envisioned by Rothbard, somewhat
conceived on the model of the state legal systems. On the contrary, Freedom and the Law can be the
starting-point for a more “classical” understanding of libertarian natural law
actually rooted in the Aristotelian-Thomistic tradition.
A more “classical” understanding might be helpful; an “understanding”
of the necessity of a generally accepted culture and tradition is mandatory, I
believe, if we are to find liberty.
Thomist rationalism moves from the
awareness of reason’s limits…. Rothbard himself is not far from this when he
points out that a rational approach needs an understanding of the structural
imperfection of our minds….
Which might suggest some humility when considering the “reason”
to be found in the countless generations that passed before us.
But this observation has to have
significant consequences for legal theory.
Perhaps one of the “significant consequences” being an
identification of the substance that gives meaning and certainty in the gaps found
when one considers application, in isolation, of the non-aggression principle.
And the realization that there must be, in fact, just such a
“substance.”