JakobVirgil wrote:
There is a bit of a going idea that laws spring from ideas about property.
Gintis, Boyd that whole gaggle of folks. It is a very clean and elegant idea and testable. Do the Hadza, !Kung, Inuit, etc the so called egalitarian hunter-gatherers have laws?
Laws of course need a definition. I like
Quote:
Rules that have proscribed punishments.
This is to separate law from norms (norms do not have proscribed punishments).
What I am looking for is observed examples not theoretical reasons why they can or can not have laws.
Your definition of law is wholly inadequate. You have limited yourself to penal law.
When you slip and fall on my front step, and you sue me to cover your medical costs, I am not being punished. I am compensating you for the harm that was done to you by my negligence and I am putting you back--as far as money will allow--into the position that you were in before you were injured.
(1) When you buy a product from me that is defective and you sue me for breach of contract, I am not being punished. I am delivering that which I promised to you in exchange for the purchase price.
(2) When I send a person into quarantine, and he challenges that decision in front of a review board, I am not being punished. My decision is being examined to ensure that I made that decision on the basis of reliable, medical evidence, and that it complies with all of the requirements of the statute that authorizes me to do that.
(3) When a parent gives me permission to treat a child in that parent's care, no one is being punished.
(4) When I present my passport in order to enter a foreign country, no one is being punished.
1. it this I think you are wrong how are there not sanctions for being in breach of contract?
2. If you are found in violation you are not punished? If the quarantined person violates his quarantine is he punished?
3. If you treat a child against his parents wishes there is no sanction?
4. If you refuse to present your passport I am pretty sure the is some kind of punishment.