The Theory of the Legal State

In this article, which has not been published before, the late Prof. du Plessis lays bare the philosophical roots of the liberal-democratic state, or the legal state, as he preferred to call it. After a recapitulative version of the theory of the legal state, het indicates the origin of this for...

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Main Author: L. J. Du Plessis
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: Scriber Editorial Systems 1981-02-01
Series:Koers : Bulletin for Christian Scholarship
Online Access:https://www.koersjournal.org.za/index.php/koers/article/view/1084
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spelling doaj-594b6322b3b94729bec45eb8fb0eb0a92020-11-25T01:16:11ZafrScriber Editorial SystemsKoers : Bulletin for Christian Scholarship0023-270X2304-85571981-02-0146110.4102/koers.v46i1.1084The Theory of the Legal StateL. J. Du Plessis0Late Professor of Law P.U. for C.H.E. In this article, which has not been published before, the late Prof. du Plessis lays bare the philosophical roots of the liberal-democratic state, or the legal state, as he preferred to call it. After a recapitulative version of the theory of the legal state, het indicates the origin of this form in Greek philosophy and in Medieval thought. The stress, however, is on the Modem Era, in which he distinuishes two main periods in the development of the theory of the legal state: • the jusnaturalistic period and the • positivistic or formal period. He argues that positivism has destroyed the original ideal o f individual freedom in facts by regarding justice as a purely formal matter susceptible to any content. All guarantees for individual freedom which rested on a universal normative system fe ll away. The state defines its own competence and limits itself to legal forms in all its activities. The legal state thus merely becomes the state, any state as determined by fixed rules o f its own making to which it binds itselfin all its functioning. Law sinks to a mere form in which the juristic personality of the state manifests its supremacy, and from this there is only one step to the concept that the state is identical with law, so that any state necessarily is a legal state, and any state action which is formally correct, is legal. The article concludes with a brief representation o f the author’s own political and legal vision. https://www.koersjournal.org.za/index.php/koers/article/view/1084
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L. J. Du Plessis
spellingShingle L. J. Du Plessis
The Theory of the Legal State
Koers : Bulletin for Christian Scholarship
author_facet L. J. Du Plessis
author_sort L. J. Du Plessis
title The Theory of the Legal State
title_short The Theory of the Legal State
title_full The Theory of the Legal State
title_fullStr The Theory of the Legal State
title_full_unstemmed The Theory of the Legal State
title_sort theory of the legal state
publisher Scriber Editorial Systems
series Koers : Bulletin for Christian Scholarship
issn 0023-270X
2304-8557
publishDate 1981-02-01
description In this article, which has not been published before, the late Prof. du Plessis lays bare the philosophical roots of the liberal-democratic state, or the legal state, as he preferred to call it. After a recapitulative version of the theory of the legal state, het indicates the origin of this form in Greek philosophy and in Medieval thought. The stress, however, is on the Modem Era, in which he distinuishes two main periods in the development of the theory of the legal state: • the jusnaturalistic period and the • positivistic or formal period. He argues that positivism has destroyed the original ideal o f individual freedom in facts by regarding justice as a purely formal matter susceptible to any content. All guarantees for individual freedom which rested on a universal normative system fe ll away. The state defines its own competence and limits itself to legal forms in all its activities. The legal state thus merely becomes the state, any state as determined by fixed rules o f its own making to which it binds itselfin all its functioning. Law sinks to a mere form in which the juristic personality of the state manifests its supremacy, and from this there is only one step to the concept that the state is identical with law, so that any state necessarily is a legal state, and any state action which is formally correct, is legal. The article concludes with a brief representation o f the author’s own political and legal vision.
url https://www.koersjournal.org.za/index.php/koers/article/view/1084
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