The autonomy of law as interdisciplinary immanence: reflections from the Hegel-Hugo debate

Authors

  • André Santos Campos Universidade Lusíada de Lisboa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15448/1984-6746.2011.3.9713

Keywords:

Hugo. Savigny. Hegel. Philosophy of Law. Autonomy. Interdisciplinarity.

Abstract

In the debate between the Historische Rechtschule (Hugo and Savigny) and Hegel about who is legitimately entitled to develop legal theory, the former considered philosophy of law to be inherent to systematic science of law, whereas the latter considered the concept of Law in a necessary transdisciplinary dialectic – there would then be a difference between ‘the jurists’ philosophy of law’ and ‘the philosophers’ philosophy of law’. I will demonstrate that such distinction cannot stand. A ‘jurists’ philosophy of law’ does not exist precisely because legal norms and their application are merely one of the law’s moments. The law’s attitude is one of inclusion: philosophy of law’s disciplinary autonomy occurs in the law’s interdisciplinary immanence.

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Author Biography

André Santos Campos, Universidade Lusíada de Lisboa

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Published

2011-12-30

How to Cite

Campos, A. S. (2011). The autonomy of law as interdisciplinary immanence: reflections from the Hegel-Hugo debate. Veritas (Porto Alegre), 56(3). https://doi.org/10.15448/1984-6746.2011.3.9713