Celebrating the 'brilliance' of Daniel Farber -- and the law
This year marks the 20th anniversary of what is still to my mind the greatest law review article I’ve ever read, Daniel Farber’s “The Case Against Brilliance” (70 Minn. L. Rev. 917 (1986)). Farber’s article was a critique of two then-recent law review articles, one by Dworkin and the other by one-time Michael Dorf co-author Laurence Tribe. Both articles, Farber argued, are examples of brilliant scholarship. For example, Dworkin’s article, as I remember, had demonstrated counter-intuitively how Rehnquist’s dissenting opinion in Garcia v. San Antonio Metro. Transit Auth. (469 U.S. 528 (1985)) (which argued in dissent that the 10th and 11th amendments immunized state governments from federal employment regulations) actually endorsed constitutional recognition of social welfare rights. The problem, according to Farber, is that such brilliant, counterintuitive arguments are simply incompatible with how the law, or at least the common law, really works. The law, unlike say economics, is meant to speak to the everyday person. A ‘brilliant’ legal argument – almost by definition – is one that would not be foreseen by the everyday person. For this reason, the attribute of ‘brilliance’ runs counter to what the law is really about.
To my reading, I have never seen an effective refutation to Farber’s argument. But I found my mind revisiting Farber’s wonderful idea recently in reading about radical constitutional satire in early 19th century England. One of the defining features of this satire was a (feigned) extreme naiveté on the part of the satirical observer, a naiveté that took the government and its vision of the English constitution at its word and then sought to reconcile that word with actual state of society around it. (Obligatory legal reference: this naiveté originally emerged as a way to protect writers against charges of seditious libel.) The genius in the satire was found in the absurdity of the reconciliation. Interestingly, this description of satire resonates very closely with Nicholas Luhmann’s and Gunther Teubner’s famous description of the law as an ‘autopoietic system’, by which they meant that the law is ‘normative closed’ – i.e., the law takes its own nornative pronouncements as given and uncontestable – and yet ‘cognitive open’ – i.e., it is still able to perceive empirical events of the society around it. Seen in this light, there appears a real resonance between what Dworkin was doing for American constitutionalism with his ‘brilliant’ reinterpretation Rehnquist’s dissent and what early 19th century radicals were doing for British constitutionalism with their satirical reinterpretations of Blackstone.
And I wonder if herein might lie at least one response to Farber’s article. I recall reading that Pablo Picasso once said that it had taken him many years to learn how to draw like a child. Similarly, one could argue that it’s taken the common law many years to learn how to appear to be so very not-brilliant. Is ‘brilliance’ in legal scholarship really just a satire of the common law’s brilliant anti-brilliance? If so, does it contribute to the common law what satire contributed to English constitutional development of the early 19th century? Is it perhaps an entertaining and somewhat paradoxical reminder of what the law is not? Is it a reminder not to take the law as seriously as it must take itself? Is it perhaps a reminder of how the law’s non-brilliance is often itself the product of a (perhaps unintentional) brilliance that is superior to our own?
And, of course, this was precisely the ‘brilliance’ of Farber’s own article. It exposed something important about what the law is not (i.e., ‘brilliant’); it reminded us not to take the brilliance of the law so seriously; and it suggested that the law was much more brilliant in its non-brilliance then we could ever be in our brilliance alone. All in a wonderfully entertaining fashion. It was satire in the purest – and very best, and most useful – sense. And this is probably why I regard it as the best law review article I’ve ever read.
To my reading, I have never seen an effective refutation to Farber’s argument. But I found my mind revisiting Farber’s wonderful idea recently in reading about radical constitutional satire in early 19th century England. One of the defining features of this satire was a (feigned) extreme naiveté on the part of the satirical observer, a naiveté that took the government and its vision of the English constitution at its word and then sought to reconcile that word with actual state of society around it. (Obligatory legal reference: this naiveté originally emerged as a way to protect writers against charges of seditious libel.) The genius in the satire was found in the absurdity of the reconciliation. Interestingly, this description of satire resonates very closely with Nicholas Luhmann’s and Gunther Teubner’s famous description of the law as an ‘autopoietic system’, by which they meant that the law is ‘normative closed’ – i.e., the law takes its own nornative pronouncements as given and uncontestable – and yet ‘cognitive open’ – i.e., it is still able to perceive empirical events of the society around it. Seen in this light, there appears a real resonance between what Dworkin was doing for American constitutionalism with his ‘brilliant’ reinterpretation Rehnquist’s dissent and what early 19th century radicals were doing for British constitutionalism with their satirical reinterpretations of Blackstone.
And I wonder if herein might lie at least one response to Farber’s article. I recall reading that Pablo Picasso once said that it had taken him many years to learn how to draw like a child. Similarly, one could argue that it’s taken the common law many years to learn how to appear to be so very not-brilliant. Is ‘brilliance’ in legal scholarship really just a satire of the common law’s brilliant anti-brilliance? If so, does it contribute to the common law what satire contributed to English constitutional development of the early 19th century? Is it perhaps an entertaining and somewhat paradoxical reminder of what the law is not? Is it a reminder not to take the law as seriously as it must take itself? Is it perhaps a reminder of how the law’s non-brilliance is often itself the product of a (perhaps unintentional) brilliance that is superior to our own?
And, of course, this was precisely the ‘brilliance’ of Farber’s own article. It exposed something important about what the law is not (i.e., ‘brilliant’); it reminded us not to take the brilliance of the law so seriously; and it suggested that the law was much more brilliant in its non-brilliance then we could ever be in our brilliance alone. All in a wonderfully entertaining fashion. It was satire in the purest – and very best, and most useful – sense. And this is probably why I regard it as the best law review article I’ve ever read.
7 Comments:
At 3:24 PM,
Michael C. Dorf said…
At the risk -- no, make that the certainty -- of sounding snarky, I'll add that this is a brilliant post.
At 4:37 PM,
Michael W. Dowdle said…
Yea!? Well ... as I noted in the acknowledgement to our book on Public Accountability, everything I learned I learned at Columbia.
At 5:39 PM,
Craig J. Albert said…
Let me begin a digression. True, some legal arguments are "brilliant" in the sense of being counterintuitive, but those are not necessarily unforeseeable, either to some or to all. I think the difference between the merely unforeseeable and the counterintuitive is found in the reaction to the argument. The unforseeable generates an "aha!"; the counterintuitive generates an "Oh, s**t!"
This post caused me to wonder how you feel about patent protection and copyright protection for legal arguments. In the tax field, for example, several patents have been granted for tax strategies, i.e., the patentee discloses a "business method" that garners a particular treatment under tax law that satisfies the traditional novelty/utility/nonobviousness etc. standards. (See this recent report from the Joint Committee on Taxation for a backgrounder. ) The patentee then demands a license fee from anyone else who employs that particular strategy. (As a side note, see how cleverly this avoids the creation of a lawyer-client relationship an attendant issues of malpractice if the strategy goes sour.)
If you accept the view that law is a pure public good (in the economic sense), and that its purpose is to establish norms and mold behavior, then why should anyone ever be able to have a legal monopoly on clever ideas about law?)
At 9:44 PM,
Michael C. Dorf said…
I'm not sure who the "you" whose feelings about this subject Craig is asking about, but, narcissist that I am, I'll assume I am he (or rather, "I am you," not to be confused with Yoo!). Patent protection for this sort of thing strikes me as a very bad idea, even by the everything-is-patentable standards of the patent office circa 1996. Just today in my civil procedure class, I had occasion to mock the idea of a patent for the "one-click" ordering system. But somehow the ability to patent a tax avoidance mechanism (even if a legal one) seems to add insult to injury: not only do you get the fees from your clients for getting them a tax break, but then you get to collect when others nickle and dime the govt.
At 10:07 PM,
Craig J. Albert said…
This post has been removed by a blog administrator.
At 10:09 PM,
Craig J. Albert said…
The easy anwer is that legal reasoning is neither a science nor a useful art, and therefore the federal government lacks the power to grant a patent for legal reasoning.
At 9:38 AM,
Michael W. Dowdle said…
To quote Cyndi Lauper, "The mind boggles!" The idea of giving IP protection for legal advice makes me want to download some pirated something or other as a matter of principle.
On the other hand, this opens up a whole new realm of opportunity for China and other developing countries: pirated legal advice! Pretty soon, one will be able to walk down any street in Beijing and be able to buy detailed instructions on how to set up a tax haven in the Caymans for US$5.
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