Do We Have Reasons to Obey the Law?

Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 17 (2):159-197 (2020)
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Abstract

Instead of the question, ‘do we have an obligation to obey the law?,’ we should first ask the more modest question, ‘do we have reasons to obey the law?’ This paper offers a new account of the notion of the content-independence of legal reasons in terms of the grounding relation. That account is then used to mount a defense of the claim that we do indeed have content-independent moral reasons to obey the law (because it is the law), and that these reasons, very plausibly, often amount to an obligation to so act.

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Edmund Tweedy Flanigan
Ludwig Maximilians Universität, München

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