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8 - Liberty, community, and corrective justice

from Part III - Risk, compensation, and torts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2009

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Summary

In a well-known article, Duncan Kennedy has stated that the central problem for law is its treatment of the fundamental contradiction of our condition. On the one hand we are dependent on others for protection against destruction and for the fullest realization of our sense of ourselves; on the other hand we recognize in others a threat to our own well-being. Kennedy regarded the dilemma “that relations with others are both necessary to and incompatible with our freedom” as the essence of every legal problem, and he ascribed to the liberal conception of law the historical function of dressing up as rational or natural the structures of bondage that emerged as its particular resolutions. Kennedy's contradiction invokes the recurrent tension between the notions of liberty and community that supply traditional vantage points for the analysis of social and political relations. The reconciliation of these notions poses an enduring philosophical problem, and one need not agree with Kennedy's unflattering assessment of the law's function to realize that it is a problem in which law too has been centrally implicated.

My concern in this essay will be the way in which private law, especially tort law, deals with this dilemma. Several considerations justify attention to the theory of private law. First, no-one can read the great classics of Western political and moral philosophy without being impressed by the hold that private law has had on such writing.

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Liability and Responsibility
Essays in Law and Morals
, pp. 290 - 316
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

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