Structure of Judicial Oratory

Structure of Judicial Oratory

03/11/2014


Focus II: Right, Wrong and Self-Constitution


The employment of legal language as ethical practice is the question. What is meant by ethical practice?  Actions of an individual substantiate ethical practice and this constitutes the self of the individual. Ethics understood as self-constitution comes down to us from Aristotle. Ethics is neither a set of norms, nor a domain of knowledge, but individuals actively constituting their own self, ethos. Practices formative to ethos are neither universal nor private matters. Each institutional social setting (e.g., army barrack, police station, refugee camp, prison, and so on) has its organizational power structure, but also its own ethics. Each social micro-universe (say, each family or workplace) may present its unique ethics.
In any of these contexts, ethics is not the rules of those institutions insofar as they remain mere external confines of individual lives. The practice of an ethic penetrates the individual, works from the inside.  Unlike the inborn first-nature, which is given and irremovable, the ethical second nature needs to be upheld and substantiand in one’s deeds and undertakings.
Inserted to the legal context, ethical practice will immediately get entangled with practices of power. Viewed from the side of the society, the law is a system for the exercise of power: authorisations coming with constrictions and rules imposed on subjects. However, legal practice may also be viewed from the side of the subjects. It may appear as domination backed up by rules, but also as struggles of subjects against domination. An individual may be dragged to the law by force. But then an individual may also enter the law of one’s own accord – by asserting one’s rights, invoking the legal system, and speaking juridical language in general.
The law may provide effective defences, elements that an individual in turn may use against domination. Insofar as employment of these elements generates resistance to external power, what is the ensuing self-constitution of that practice?

Logos and Phone

Aristotle’s Politics at Book One, Chapter Two (1253a10–17) allows an entry point to the said problem. This is the well-known piece where human life is taken apart from the merely animal life. According to Aristotle, ‘man alone of the animals possesses speech (λόγος logos)’, other animals possess mere voice (φωνὴ, phone). ‘The mere voice,’ says Aristotle, ‘can indicate pain and pleasure, […] but speech is designed to indicate the advantageous and the harmful, and therefore also the right and the wrong’. The language of right and wrong is crucial, ‘for it is the special property of man in distinction from the other animals that he alone has perception of good and bad and right and wrong and the other moral qualities’.

Aristotle views human being as someone who apprehends moral qualities. In the background is Aristotle’s view that humanity is generated in the practices of ethics and politics. Yet, for Aristotle, ethics and politics are more or less the same practice – practice of virtues. Difference between ethics and politics is a matter of effects. The ethical effect is the constitution of the self and the political effect is the constitution of the polis. Important anyway is that ethics and politics come hand in hand: human life may be ethical only if it is political, and it can be political only if it is ethical. To get down to what exists at the heart of this complex, Aristotle turns to the employment of logos.
Logos (λόγος) is the speech and language employed in the course of practical life. If through language we are made into humans, then how does it make this happen to us? The mere voice, a sound (φωνὴ, phone), may be produced as a sign (σημεῖον, sêmeion) of pain and pleasure, but this is not enough for a language. Language, at least the moral language, is self-contained. Words do not stand for things that are external to language. Instead of that, speech exists for the purposes of bringing clear to the mind and manifesting (δηλος, dêlos) such distinctions that belong inherently to the language (λόγος). Through these distinctions we become human beings: we are humans when an entire system of language runs through our selves.
Aristotle says that language exists for the purpose of making distinctions between moral qualities, such as right and wrong. Competency for language is something that the human being alone bears. Language is there to provide its bearer the means and power to sustain a perception (αἴσθησις, aisthêsis) of right and wrong. Now, while it may be true that a human individual alone makes distinctions between right and wrong, this is not the point. The point is that only through making that distinction an individual becomes human. Every time someone makes that distinction, the language starts to operate in him. The person in question performs a distinction between the human self (that one becomes in and by that performance) and the mere animal (subject of inarticulate pain and pleasure that one of course still remains).

In summary, the argument of the analysis in Politics may be resumed in the following formula:
– Language is human constitution.
– Language exists for the purpose of distinguishing between right and wrong.
– Therefore, distinction between right and wrong is the human constitution.
At this point the original question needs to be resumed. May the employment of legal language work out as ethical practice? Thinking about really existing candidates for an Aristotelian language of right and wrong, the first coming across is juridical language, the language of the law. Does not the law exist exactly for the purpose of distinguishing between right and wrong? If it does, should not the Aristotelian argument be applicable for it, all the way to the conclusion? Employment of the law is ethical practice and this is where the self comes about. The conclusion is that human constitution is in fact all legal. This may sound coherent reasoning, but a little bit offhand improvisation at the same time. Without knowledge of the contexts and ways in which juridical language is employed such logical exercise does not amount to much. Can anything of more substance be achieved?

Subjection

Employment of juridical language is not usual conversation about moral issues between gentlemen. Communicative search of solutions plausible to all is not legal practice, not even ideally. Disagreements do not resolve in the way that that one of the parties finally understands that he was wrong. Legal practice is not a game where everyone will try to find out together what is right. True, the game goes on by way of putting forward all the reasons, speech and language (λόγος) to support one’s cause and an element of convincing and persuading exists without doubt. However, when the talking is over, everyone will realise that legal language comes with a threat from the very start. Legal language: words that come with a threat. The source of the threat is the overpowering enforcement machinery of the repressive state.

The repressive machinery stands behind the legal language of right and wrong. The juridical system holds certain expectations of that machinery: the machinery should not need to persuade, discipline or rehabilitate nonconformists; having promulgated its judgement, the law expects the machinery to subjugate them entirely regardless of their opinion. At that stage the law is as blind as a bat to reason, even if before that stage legal argumentation had appeared as petitioning reason. The strategy of invocation of the legal system is ultimately not chosen because it appeals to rationally compelling truth. Invocation of the legal system appeals to force.
Despite the underlying presence of overpowering force, juridical language as a language of right and wrong is nevertheless available also to those who wish to practice resistance.  All the same, the law is a dangerous game of power; it is ultimately about appropriating the irrational force element with which the law is invested. In principle, the force is available to all, and glorious battles may be won with it. However, invocation and appropriation of irrational forces comes with a cost. Someone who asserts rights will have to become a legal subject.

The problem now seems to be this: what is it that an individual must become, make of itself, when entering the field of law? What idea of the law one will internalise? This is the problem of subjection, subject-making that goes along with the exercise of power. According to Judith Butler, subjection is ‘the process of becoming subordinated by power as well as the process of becoming a subject’. Power and psyche go together in subjection: it is a process where ‘power that at first appears as external, pressed upon the subject, pressing the subject into subordination, assumes a psychic form that constitutes the subject’s self-identity’.[i] Subjection is not simply power that works upon the individual as externally imposed unfreedom (subjugation, domination, oppression). It works through a self that is its own product.
This problem of subjection is not at all about roles acted out by individuals, dramatic masks to be taken off and replaced by others. More permanently effective form of the law exists that makes subjects out of individuals. Whereas the use of this form takes place in social relations, the target domain of effects is one’s self-relation. This domain consists primarily of the ways in which one gets by dealing with one’s self. In this sense of a self-relation, the subject is about how an ‘I’ relates with ‘myself’. What has the law to do with that?

Positive Law

To become a legal subject does not mean internalising subject-structuring structures given externally to the subject. The psychic form assumed by the law in individuals is not the same as the form that the law assumes in social structure. What is it in one’s relation to the law that may have self-constituting effects? There are two rather opposite options available. The first option is that the subject looks for authority in the law. Whether found or not found eventually, it is this search for authority that defines a legal subject. The second option is the law as something positive, conceived as external from the start. This is to deny and renounce all moral authority of the law.

On the basis of the historical fact of positivisation of the law, Slavoj Žižek, for one, has taken an interesting stance.  The moral constitution of a modern subject is gained through ‘acceptance of the customs and rules of social life in their nonsensical, given character, through acceptance of the fact that “Law is law”, we are internally freed from its constraints’.[ii] Stripped of all moral qualities the law is obeyed only because it is the law. The effect is moral liberation that goes for the internal sphere of the psyche.
Liberation works out the ground for ethical practice: a negative relation to the law precedes an ethical self-relation. What needs to be internalised first is the idea that the law is external. This is perhaps crucial to the psychic form that the law assumes and to the way it it makes subjects, but we certainly cannot stop there.

[i] Judith Butler, The Psychic Life of Power. Theories in Subjection. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California, 1997, p. 2–3.
[ii] Slavoj Žižek, The Sublime Object of Ideology. London and New York: Verso 1990, 80.

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