Harry,
Thanks for your comments. I've spent time reflecting on your first point in particular, because it has given me a new way to frame and think about my experiences with our legal system, and the ways in which those experiences have framed my clashing perspectives on the law.
I think there's a lot of merit to the notion that my transformation from client to counsel (or at least law student analyzing legal issues through an attorney's lens) is what truly underpinned my changing views on law and the way it functions. I appreciate that you elucidated this point in your comment, because I don't think I would have seen it this way myself, since my experience as a client is inextricable from and fundamentally intertwined with my childhood. That said, I think that the point you raise that most clients aren't interested in transcendental nonsense and legal fictions is entirely valid, at least to the extent that those clients are not also lawyers in their professional lives. However, while both adult and child clients may be similar in the sense that they don't revere meaningless legal principles, as a more general matter I do still think that children (clients or not) are unique in that, at least in my experience, they don't buy into BS and oftentimes possess a clarity of vision that adults may lack, as it gets clouded over time by selling and swindling and cynicism. Ultimately, as your point pertains to my essay and its conclusion, I think that perhaps I can't entirely separate these lines of demarcation (client/counsel Courtney or child/adult Courtney), but that both of these dichotomies, and their interplay, have shaped and contributed to my clashing perspectives.
I also agree with your second point. I think I just need to clarify/be more precise in my language above, because really, what I mean by "honesty" is in fact employing functionalism, predicting what courts will do in fact, and being cultivating a more realistic conception of "law". However, I recognize that transcendental nonsense may still be necessary in facilitating that process (in more complex scenarios, those predictions couldn't be made without having a grasp on how courts have evaluated or decided on the underlying legal fictions). However, I do think that a transformation to a more functional approach (regardless of whether the transcendental nonsense words can ever be eradicated from that approach or not) will at least open the door to a more honest, and hopefully more ethically grounded, assessment of our legal system.
Thanks again for your comments; they inspired reflection, and I really appreciate it.
Courtney
-- CourtneyDoak - 26 Jul 2012 |