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37 Revus: J. Const. Theory & Phil. Law 9 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/revus37 and id is 1 raw text is: 


                                                                               9

   Stefano Bertea*

   A problem for the unambitious view of legal
   normativity

   In this contribution, I discuss the so-called unambitious view of legal normativity, as
   it is specifically theorised by Brian Bix. While I agree with Bix that legal normativity
   should not be assumed to be reducible by default to moral normativity, I will argue that
   the normativity of law cannot be qualified as a sui generis form of normativity, for, pace
   Bix, the quality of legal normativity is best understood as genuine. That is, the normative
   claims the law makes on its subjects do address the general practical question: What
   ought we to do?

   Keywords: legal positivism, normativity, law, morality, Hart (HLA), Kelsen (Hans)

   1 INTRODUCTION
   Today, legal theorists of different orientations and with diverse backgrounds
agree that the task of elucidating the normativity of law in general and the natu-
re of such normativity in particular are key components of any ambitious rese-
arch programme in jurisprudence.' Brian Bix figures among them, since in his
work he repeatedly engages with (multiple components of) the normativity of
law, by theorising a position that is both original and intriguing.2 Here, I intend
to specifically discuss a study that appeared in a previous issue of this journal,
where Bix's own account of legal normativity is made to emerge progressively
through the critical treatment of the conceptions put forward by Hans Kelsen
and Herbert Hart.3 In that study, Bix (2018: 40) commits himself to (what he
qualifies as) an unambitious view of legal normativity, which is programma-
tically purported to secure an explanation of the normative components of the
law that is coherent with the stance of legal positivism. Insofar as Bix's unam-
bitious view of legal normativity can be shown to be tenable, then we would be
able to count on a framework that contributes, on the one hand, to advance our
understanding of a fundamental component of the law-its normativity-and,

   stefano.bertea@leicester.ac.uk I Associate Professor of Law, School of Law, University of
   Leicester (UK) and DFG Research Fellow at the Institute of Philosophy, Goethe University
   Frankfurt (Germany).
1  The task of explaining legal normativity is central to the following contemporary works,
   among many others: Hart 1982, Postema 1982, Raz 1994, Coleman 2001, Marmor 2001, Per-
   ry 2001, Alexy 2002, Marmor & Sarch 2015, and Green 2018. For a dissenting position see
   Enoch 2011.
2  In particular, I should refer the reader to the claims defended in Bix 1996, Bix 2006, Bix 2012,
   Bix 2015, and Bix 2018.
3  The study I refer to is Bix 2018.

                                       journal for constitutional theory and philosophy of law  P Vue
                                                                                (2019)37

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