The Rule of Law – In Classical Liberalism & Libertarianism
by
Tibor R. Machan
by Tibor R. Machan
Classical
liberals and libertarians, especially those who admire the works
of the famous legal theorists and economist F. A. Hayek, are fond
of pointing out that a free society requires the rule of law. Others,
critical of this political tradition, note, however, that laws rule
most societies, many of them quite tyrannical, so the rule of law
has no bearing on a society’s being free.
What
might be the source of the close relationship alleged between free
societies and the rule of law is that the only laws that can be
applied uniformly and universally in society are the very few that
aim to keep us free. Other so-called laws are really just edicts
from rulers, not bona fide laws, since they apply selectively, not
equally to us all.
This
goes back, in part, to natural law theory which is itself related
to the role of laws in the natural world. Laws regulate everything
of a certain kind, not just some such things. The laws of motion
apply to all things movable; the laws of photosynthesis to all things
that can undergo that organic chemical process. And so on and so
forth.
The
difference is that with natural laws as applied to human beings,
laws do not automatically apply but serve as guidelines to choose
successful actions and institutions. That is because we humans possess
free will and can attempt to circumvent the laws that we ought to
follow so as to succeed, live right as human beings. But otherwise
these are still laws, only moral, ethical or political laws, not
biological, chemical or physiological ones.
Apart
from this aspect of laws that guide human conduct, namely, that
they regulate voluntary action, such laws, too, need to be universal,
applicable to all humans. Only those qualify as bona fide laws that
apply universally, to all humans, not just to some based on certain
peculiarities of the law maker(s) or those intended to be ruled
by the edict(s).
But
there are very few laws that really apply to us all they are the
ones mainly concerned with protecting our basic rights. The rule
of law is then evident where very few such laws are upheld, where
government is, therefore, limited to upholding them. That is what
connects the rule of law so closely with the free society.
For
example, no one ought to murder, rob, kidnap, or assault another
person. These are universal principles of human conduct. They are,
to use Kant’s terminology, categorically true for guiding human
interaction, anytime, anywhere. However, that seatbelts ought to
be worn is not universally true there can be plenty of circumstances
in which that is false. Or again that 40% of one’s earnings ought
to be paid to the legal authorities that, too, lacks universality
by a long shot, if it is ever true at all.
So,
when such edicts are made into laws, despite the appearance that’s
based on pomp and circumstance being "signed into law,"
"entered into law books," etc. they fail to amount to
bona fide laws. They are bogus laws and will be widely resisted
by those who realize this, know that the edicts do not apply to
them. These edicts will, thus, violate the principle of the rule
of law.
As
a result of the proliferation of pseudo laws, all bona fide laws,
those that really ought to be obeyed by everyone, tend to lose their
credibility. When the legal order treats drug or alcohol prohibition,
or affirmative action mandates, along lines it treats the prohibition
against murder and rape when it equivocates between these
two categories of edicts by calling both of them laws it
is natural for people to begin to see them both as merely conventional,
just something those in power happen to wish to prohibit or mandate,
not as something that ought to be obeyed.
One
virtue of the classical liberal, libertarian idea of law is that
it preserves the coherent, even reverent meaning of the concept
"law" and does not water it down, thereby weakening its
reputation and undermining its binding force.
February
26, 2004
Tibor
Machan [send
him mail] holds
the Freedom Communications Professorship of Free Enterprise and
Business Ethics at the Argyros School of Business & Economics, Chapman
University, CA. A Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford
University, he is author of 20+ books, most recently, Putting
Humans First: Why We Are Nature's Favorite.
Copyright
© 2004 Tibor Machan
Tibor
Machan Archives
|