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Conclusion

law, order and freedom

Cees MarisFrans Jacobs

pp. 353-378

Résumé

Chapter 10 summarises the historical developments of the preceding chapters in light of the central problems of legal philosophy as elaborated on in Chapter 1. It proceeds to discuss whether political liberalism, which has found its most impressive articulation in the theory of justice of John Rawls, provides an adequate answer to these problems. Political liberalism limits itself to articulating the conditions for the peaceful and fair co-operation of persons with conflicting worldviews. It is exclusively a practical theory of the political domain, not a metaphysical doctrine of the nature of man. The chapter concludes that, although there certainly is no such thing as a liberal End of History, for the time being political liberalism emerges from historical experience as providing law with the most reasonable balance of legal order and freedom available.

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

Maris Cees, Jacobs Frans (2012) Law, order and freedom: a historical introduction to legal philosophy. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 353-378

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-1457-1_10

Citation complète:

Maris Cees, Jacobs Frans, 2012, Conclusion: law, order and freedom. In C. Maris & F. Jacobs (eds.) Law, order and freedom (353-378). Dordrecht, Springer.