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H. L. A. Hart (Herbert Lionel Adolphus Hart) (1907-1992) is considered one of the most important legal philosophers of the twentieth
century. He is the author of The Concept of Law and was Professor of Jurisprudence at Oxford University. Hart
developed a sophisticated theory of legal positivism within the framework of
analytic philosophy.
Biographical Sketch
Hart was born in 1907, the son of a Jewish
tailor of German and Polish origin.
Educated at Bradford Grammar School and at New College,
Oxford, where he studied Classical Greats. Hart became a Barrister and
practiced at the Chancery Bar from 1932 to 1940.
During World War II, Hart worked with MI5, a division of British military intelligence. In 1945, he was appointed a
tutor at New College, Oxford. In 1952, he was selected the Professor of Jurisprudence at
the University of Oxford. He resigned the Chair in 1969, and was succeeded by Ronald Dworkin.
Philosophical Method
More than any other person, Hart revolutionized the methods of jurisprudence and the philosophy of law in the English speaking
world. Influenced by J. L. Austin and Ludwig Wittgenstein, Hart brought the tools of analytic, and especially linguistic, philosophy to
bear on the central problems of legal theory. Hart's method combined the careful analysis of twentieth century analytic
philosophy with the jurisprudential tradition of Jeremy Bentham, the great English legal, political, and moral philosopher.
The Concept of Law
Hart's most famous work is The Concept of Law first published in 1961 with a
second edition including a new post script published posthumously in 1994. The book emerged
from a set of lectures that Hart began to deliver in 1952, and it is presaged by his Holmes lecture, Positivism and the
Separation of Law and Morals delivered at Harvard Law School The Concept of Law developed a sophisticated view of
legal positivism. Among the many ideas developed in this book are:
- A critique of John Austin's theory that law is the command of the sovereign backed by the threat of punishment.
- A distinction between primary and secondary legal rules, where a primary rule governs conduct and a secondary rule allows of
the creation, alteration, or extinction of primary rules.
- The idea of the rule of recognition, a social rule that differentiated between those norms that have the authority of law and
those that do not.
Other Work
With Tony Honoré, Hart wrote
Causation in the Law (1959, second edition 1985). As a result of his famous debate with Patrick (later Lord) Devlin the role of the criminal law in enforcing
moral norms, Hart wrote Law, Liberty and Morality (1963) and The Morality of
the Criminal Law (1965).
Related Topics
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