Document Type
Essay
Publication Date
2017
Publication Information
31 DIRITTO PUBBLICO COMPARATO ED EUROPO ONLINE 538 (2017).
Abstract
This essay offers a defense of originalist constitutional interpretation grounded on the moral purposes of positive law. This essay draws on the natural law tradition to argue that a reasonably just set of constitutional rules merits the interpreter’s moral obligation. This is so not because a given constitution is perfectly just, nor because the constitution “just is,” but rather because a practically reasonable person should promote the moral benefits of a posited and durable, framework of cooperation that passes the threshold of moral acceptability. And, because practical reason underdetermines what kind of constitution a polity should choose, many modern constitutions clear that threshold.
Recommended Citation
Jeffrey A. Pojanowski,
Why Should Anyone Be an Originalist?,
31 DIRITTO PUBBLICO COMPARATO ED EUROPO ONLINE 538 (2017)..
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.nd.edu/law_faculty_scholarship/1564