Command Theory 14nov15
Command Theory 14nov15
Command Theory 14nov15
Command Theories
of Law
• Thomas Hobbes
• Jeremy Bentham
• John Austin
• H.L.A. Hart
Thomas Hobbes
• Advocated strong government and some consider him
the father of totalitarianism…
• Insightful exposition of the human condition-
“…solitary, poor, nasty, brutal and short…”
• Known for one interpretation of the Social Contract
Theory
Contribution to Jurisprudence?
Leviathan (1651)
• Necessary to understand the political background
to appreciate Hobbes’ theory propounded in
Leviathan
• Published just after the English Civil War (1642-
1651), and
• Thirty Years war (1618-1648)
• Treaty of Westphalia (1648)- Nation-State, State
Sovereignty
• Hobbes was born in 1588, and the thirty year war
started in 1618 (lasted till 1648). Hobbes was 30
when the war started and 60 when it finished.
• We are all creations and victims of our times
Three things to be noted:
‘Laws not properly so called’ are of two kinds: ‘Laws by analogy’ and
‘Laws by metaphor’.
•Laws by analogy- rules of fashion, dictates of honour, rules imposed
upon gentlemen by opinions current among gentlemen, and also
international law.- These are laws to be followed, they are a species of
command, but the repercussions of breaching these laws would be
limited to gaining the disapproval of other members of the group. Eg-
Must remove hat when entering church. Failure to do so will only be the
disapproval of others. Similarly, when a State breaches international
law, that State will only gain the disapproval of other States.
•Laws by metaphor- laws that govern the growth and decay of
vegetables and animals, or laws that govern the movement of
inanimate masses. These laws are not a species of command and it is
difficult to imagine how these laws can be broken.
Austin’s contribution to
Jurisprudence?
1.Analytical Jurisprudence
2.Positivism
3.Platform for Hart to build his concept of Law