我们现在都是原旨主义者吗?我希望不是!

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW Texas Law Review Pub Date : 2013-01-01 DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199793372.003.0001
J. Fleming
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引用次数: 3

摘要

近年来,有人问:“我们现在都是原旨主义者吗?”我的回答是:“我希望不会!”在文章中,我解释了原因。但首先,我要说明这个问题有一个陷阱:即使是提出“我们现在都是原创主义者吗?”这表明,人们假定了我称之为“原旨主义前提”的东西。以肯定的方式回答这个问题,说明你是在假定这个问题。原旨主义的前提是这样一种假设,即原旨主义,如果被正确地理解,是宪法解释中最好的,或者实际上是唯一的忠实概念。更强烈地说,它是一种假设,即原旨主义,正确地理解,必须是最好的,或者实际上是唯一的,宪法解释的概念。为什么如此?因为原旨主义,正确地理解,就是必须存在。通过定义。在事物的本质上——在宪法的本质上,在法律的本质上,在解释的本质上,在宪法解释的本质上忠实!我将概述这一前提下的一些有问题的假设(因此也是许多试图重建原旨主义或提出新原旨主义的学者的项目的基础)。更糟糕的是,它提出了一个问题:“我们现在都是原旨主义者吗?”的观点,可能会假设我们都已经接受了大法官安东宁·斯卡利亚(Antonin Scalia)和罗伯特·博克(Robert Bork)的思维方式,而不承认许多版本的原意主义本身一直是移动的目标,它们在很大程度上倾向于批评者的立场。如果我希望我们现在不都是原创主义者,那么我希望我们(至少是我们中的一些人)是什么呢?今天,宪法理论中许多最好的作品,无论从旧的或新的意义上讲,都不是原旨主义的;相反,它是我所说的“建构主义”。我对在宪法解释中使用历史的建构主义解释感兴趣。一个建构主义的世界看起来有点像前原意主义的世界(也就是前博克主义的世界),尽管它在理论上要比那个世界复杂得多。它将原始意义视为宪法意义的一个来源,而不是唯一的来源,更不是唯一的合法理论。它将把历史用于它所教导的东西,而不是它据称为我们所做的决定。在一个建构主义的世界里,我们会明白,历史是一堆开放的可能性,而不是权威的、确定的答案。我们会明白,我们——自封为原旨主义者的人并不比我们其他人少——总是有选择地从现在的立场出发,展望未来,解读过去。我们回顾过去,不是为了寻求权威的答案,而是为了对我们的经历和承诺有所启发。最后,我们会明白,以原旨主义的名义假装它权威性地为我们决定了问题,假装它避免了对我们对抽象道德原则和目的的承诺的意义进行规范性论证的负担,这是对过去的耻辱。我认为,忠实于对宪法的书面解释要求对宪法的解释采用哲学的方法。在解释宪法时,没有任何方法——包括任何形式的原旨主义——能够负责任地避免哲学反思和选择。
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Are We All Originalists Now? I Hope Not!
In recent years, some have asked: “Are we all originalists now?” My response is: “I hope not!” In the Article, I explain why. But first, I show that there is a trick in the question: Even to pose the question “Are we all originalists now?” suggests that one is presupposing what I shall call “the originalist premise.” To answer the question affirmatively certainly shows that one is presupposing it. The originalist premise is the assumption that originalism, rightly conceived, is the best, or indeed the only, conception of fidelity in constitutional interpretation. Put more strongly, it is the assumption that originalism, rightly conceived, has to be the best, or indeed the only, conception of constitutional interpretation. Why so? Because originalism, rightly conceived, just has to be. By definition. In the nature of things — in the nature of the Constitution, in the nature of law, in the nature of interpretation, in the nature of fidelity in constitutional interpretation! I will sketch some of the problematic assumptions underlying this premise (and thus underlying the projects of many scholars who seek to reconstruct originalism or to put forward new originalisms). Worse yet, raising the question “Are we all originalists now?” may presuppose that we all have come around to Justice Antonin Scalia’s and Robert Bork’s ways of thinking, without conceding that many versions of originalism themselves have been moving targets that have moved considerably toward the positions of their critics.If I hope we are not all originalists now, what do I hope we (at least some of us) are? Much of the best work in constitutional theory today is not originalist in either an old or a new sense; rather, it is what I have called “constructivist.” I am interested in developing a constructivist account of the uses of history in constitutional interpretation. A constructivist world would look somewhat like the pre-originalist world (that is, the pre-Borkian world), although it would be far more sophisticated theoretically than that world was. It would treat original meaning as one source of constitutional meaning among several, not the exclusive source, let alone the exclusive legitimate theory. It would use history for what it teaches rather than for what it purportedly decides for us. In a constructivist world, we would understand that history is a jumble of open possibilities, not authoritative, determinate answers. We would understand that we — self-styled originalists no less than the rest of us — always read the past selectively, from the standpoint of the present, in anticipation of the future. We look to the past, not for authoritative answers, but for illumination about our experience and our commitments. Finally, we would understand that it dishonors the past to pretend — in the name of originalism — that it authoritatively decides questions for us, and to pretend that it avoids the burden of making normative arguments about the meaning of our commitments to abstract moral principles and ends. I argue that fidelity in interpreting the Constitution as written requires a philosophic approach to constitutional interpretation. No approach — including no version of originalism — can responsibly avoid philosophic reflection and choice in interpreting the Constitution.
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期刊介绍: The Texas Law Review is a national and international leader in legal scholarship. Texas Law Review is an independent journal, edited and published entirely by students at the University of Texas School of Law. Our seven issues per year contain articles by professors, judges, and practitioners; reviews of important recent books from recognized experts, essays, commentaries; and student written notes. Texas Law Review is currently the ninth most cited legal periodical in federal and state cases in the United States and the thirteenth most cited by legal journals.
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