JURIS 1 and Social Sciences
JURIS 1 and Social Sciences
JURIS 1 and Social Sciences
7TH SEMESTER
BBA.LLB
Amity law school
auup
Introduction to Jurisprudence
• The word "jurisprudence" is derived from the Latin word "Jurisprudentia" which means "knowledge of law".
• It signifies a practical 'knowledge of law and its application’.
• Jurisprudence may be regarded as the philosophy of the law which deals with the nature and function of law.
• It can also be defined as the study of fundamental legal principles, including their philosophical, historical, and
social basis and analysis of legal concepts. ◦ It is concerned with the normative and not merely the positive; it
is not merely with the actual but also with the intended.
Jurisprudence defined by Various
Scholars
• Ulpian- defines jurisprudence as "the knowledge of things divine and human, the
science of the just and unjust".
• Bentham and his disciple Austin- in the early part of the 19th century gave the word
jurisprudence a technical significance among English lawyers.
• Fitzgerald- Jurisprudence ◦ “Jurisprudence is the name given to certain type of
investigations into law, an investigation of an abstract, general and theoretical nature
which seeks to lay bare the essential principles of law and legal systems.” ◦ To him,
jurisprudence is both philosophy of law and a reflective study rules which form the
basis of concrete legal problems.
• Keeton - Defines jurisprudence as "the study and systematic arrangement of the general
principles of law.”
• Dean Roscoe Pound-defines jurisprudence as "the science of law, using the term law in
the juridical sense, as denoting the body of principles recognized or enforced by public
and regular tribunals in the administration of justice".
• Cicero – “Philosophical aspect of knowledge of law”.
• Blackstone – Jurisprudence is the study of science of law.
• Austin - defines Jurisprudence as the "Philosophy of Positive Law". Austin was the first
jurist to make jurisprudence as a science.
• Salmond - defines jurisprudence as the science of the first principles of the
civil law. Thus he points out that jurisprudence deals with a particular
species of law e.g. civil law or law of the state. The civil law consists of
rules applied by courts in the administration of justice.
Scope
• No unanimity of opinion regarding scope of jurisprudence Jurisprudence has
been so defined to include moral and religious precepts, that has created confusion
• Austin distinguished law from morality and theology (study of nature of god)
• The scope of Jurisprudence was limited to study the concepts of law and ethics and
theology fall outside the province of jurisprudence
• Present view is that the scope of Jurisprudence can not be limited
• Anything that concerns the order and human conduct in state and society falls
under the domain of jurisprudence.
Scope
• 3. Jurisprudence and Ethics- Ethics has been defined as the science of Human
Conduct.
b. Positive Moral Code- This could be found in relation to Law as the Command of
the
c. Ethics is concerned with good human conduct in the light of public opinion.
Relationship of Jurisprudence with other Social Sciences
• Economics studies man’s efforts in satisfying his wants and producing and distributing
wealth.
• Both Jurisprudence and Economics are sciences and both aim to regulate lives of the people.
• Both of them try to develop the society and improve life of an individual. Karl Marx was a
pioneer in this regard.
Relationship of Jurisprudence with other Social Sciences
• In a politically organized society, there are regulations and laws which lay
• According to Arndts, there are four points of distinction between law and morality:
1. Law is concerned with the individual liberty of a person whereas morality deals with the collective ideas of what is good and bad.
2. Law regulates the conduct of a man as long as he is a member of a specific community whereas morals guide the conduct of man
even when he is all alone.
3. Laws take the external acts of a man into consideration whereas morals look towards factors such as inner determination and
direction of the will.
4. Law is enforced by way of “external coercion” whereas morals appeal to the free will of an individual.
• Correlation between Law and Morality
• The correlation between law and morality can be studied from three
different angles:
• Morals as the basis of law- In the early stages of society, there existed no
clear distinction between law and morality. All rules regulating human
conduct originated from a single source. All of them have been naturally
made out of supernatural