This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2009) |
Lon L. Fuller | |
---|---|
Born | Lon Luvois Fuller June 15, 1902 Hereford, Texas, U.S. |
Died | April 8, 1978 Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. | (aged 75)
Education | Stanford University (BA, LLB) |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Analytic philosophy Natural law theory |
Institutions | Harvard University |
Main interests | Legal philosophy |
Notable ideas | The internal morality of law |
Lon Luvois Fuller (June 15, 1902 – April 8, 1978) was an American legal philosopher best known as a proponent of a secular and procedural form of natural law theory. Fuller was a professor of law at Harvard Law School for many years, and is noted in American law for his contributions to both jurisprudence and the law of contracts. His 1958 debate with the British legal philosopher H. L. A. Hart in the Harvard Law Review (the Hart–Fuller debate) was important in framing the modern conflict between legal positivism and natural law theory. In his widely discussed 1964 book The Morality of Law, Fuller argues that all systems of law contain an "internal morality" that imposes on individuals a presumptive obligation of obedience.[1] Robert S. Summers said in 1984: "Fuller was one of the four most important American legal theorists of the last hundred years".[a][2]
Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha>
tags or {{efn}}
templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}}
template or {{notelist}}
template (see the help page).