Legislative sovereignty: Moving from jurisprudence towards metaphysics
Legislative sovereignty: Moving from jurisprudence towards metaphysics
Legislative sovereignty is often discussed with one eye on the past and one eye on the procedural functions of law-making in the present. This limits the scope for a conceptual understanding of legislative sovereignty and hinders its theoretical progress. This article argues that legislative sovereignty contains within it the concept of an idol and that understanding the scope and impact of the idol of sovereignty is necessary for future development in this field. Theories from Kant, Nietzsche, von Mises and Derrida are used to offer a divergent critique of legislative sovereignty while the author calls for a move towards a nuanced view of legislative and Parliamentary Sovereignty to account for its idolism. The key factor preventing the development of a truly nuanced and reflective theory of sovereignty is the devotion to former idols which are inoperable and inconsistent with modern geopolitical, inter-state relationships. The author also argues that our knowledge of sovereignty is synthetic a priori and that development in this area can only be by reason, as knowledge derived experientially is subject to the Kantian Transcendental Idealism.
sovereignty, parliament, jurisdiction, metaphysics, Philosophy of Law
360
Johnson, Marc
3146e8cd-80ea-4ff9-918b-cbf65ea3a724
2020
Johnson, Marc
3146e8cd-80ea-4ff9-918b-cbf65ea3a724
Johnson, Marc
(2020)
Legislative sovereignty: Moving from jurisprudence towards metaphysics.
Jurisprudence, 11 (3), .
Abstract
Legislative sovereignty is often discussed with one eye on the past and one eye on the procedural functions of law-making in the present. This limits the scope for a conceptual understanding of legislative sovereignty and hinders its theoretical progress. This article argues that legislative sovereignty contains within it the concept of an idol and that understanding the scope and impact of the idol of sovereignty is necessary for future development in this field. Theories from Kant, Nietzsche, von Mises and Derrida are used to offer a divergent critique of legislative sovereignty while the author calls for a move towards a nuanced view of legislative and Parliamentary Sovereignty to account for its idolism. The key factor preventing the development of a truly nuanced and reflective theory of sovereignty is the devotion to former idols which are inoperable and inconsistent with modern geopolitical, inter-state relationships. The author also argues that our knowledge of sovereignty is synthetic a priori and that development in this area can only be by reason, as knowledge derived experientially is subject to the Kantian Transcendental Idealism.
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Published date: 2020
Keywords:
sovereignty, parliament, jurisdiction, metaphysics, Philosophy of Law
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Local EPrints ID: 504758
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504758
ISSN: 2040-3313
PURE UUID: 18a063fb-81b5-4db1-97b1-9ce63ddffb68
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Date deposited: 18 Sep 2025 17:00
Last modified: 19 Sep 2025 02:19
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Author:
Marc Johnson
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