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On The Pure Theory of Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2016

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Extract

The Pure Theory of Law is a theory of positive law, not of a definite legal order, but of the law in general. It is a general theory of law. As such it is the most consistent version of that school of jurisprudence which is called legal positivism because it considers as “law” only positive law and refuses to recognize as law any other normative social order even if, in the usage of language, it is called “law”, as e.g. so-called “natural law”.

Law is—according to the Pure Theory of Law—by its very nature a definite type of norm. As a “norm” the law is the specific meaning of an act of will directed at a definite human behavior. This meaning is: that men ought to behave in a certain way. Hence an essential presupposition of the Pure Theory of Law as a positivistic theory is the recognition of the fundamental difference between the “ought” and the “is”, between norms and assertions. Assertions describe a certain object; they are true or false; norms are not describing, but prescribing; they are neither true nor false; they are valid or non-valid. Hence it is necessary to distinguish as clearly as possible between legal norms established by the legal authority, and assertions of the science of law about legal norms, the sentences by which this science describes its object.

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press and The Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1966

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References

1 Natural law is—in the last analysis—divine law, because if nature is supposed to create law it must have a will and the will can only be the will of God which manifests itself in a nature created by Him. Cf. my essay: “Die Grundlage der Naturrechtslehre.” Österreichische Zeitschrift für öffentliches Recht, Band XIII, 1963, Heft 1–2, S. 1 ff.

2 20th Century Legal Philosophy Series, Vol. I, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1945, p. XV.

3 Cf. my article: “Die Funktion der Verfassung” in Forum, XI, Jahrgang, Wien, 1964, Heft 132, S. 585.