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-- MichaelDreibelbis - 27 Jan 2009
This post is mostly about the interplay of social science and value judgments in Cohen's realistic adjudication. Just to get us started, here's how he describes the realistic judge:
"The realistic judge, finally, will not fool himself or anyone else by basing decisions upon circular reasoning from the presence or absence of corporations, conspiracies, property rights, titles, contracts, proximate causes, or other legal derivatives of the judicial decision itself. Rather, he will frankly assess the conflicting human values that are opposed
in every controversy, appraise the social importance of the precedents to which each claim appeals, open the courtroom to all evidence that will bring light to this delicate practical task of social adjustment, and consign to Von Jhering's heaven of legal concepts all attorneys whose only skill is that of the conceptual acrobat." (842)
I think we can distill the above description to the following simple instructions:
(1)employ the best available social-scientific research—psychology, economics, political science, etc.—to figure out the consequences of each possible ruling.
(2)Choose the ruling which will yield the most desirable outcome, in light of the evidence obtained in (1).
The key word in (2) is “desirable”; step 2 is a value judgment. The judge makes this decision alone, or in panels of three or nine, as the case may be. In fact, Cohen's two-step process looks a lot like the legislative process. The difference between the court and the legislature, however, is that the people delegate the business of making public value judgments to the latter via elections. Some judges are elected, but many aren't. The Supreme Court is much further removed from the people than the legislators. And the greater the distance between the people affected by the value judgments and the decision-maker, the less democratic the system. Nobody likes having their values decided for them.
Despite his obvious concern with judges deciding the people's values, though, I have a feeling that Cohen was not too worried about the anti-democratic implications of judicial realism, however. I'm speculating now, but perhaps he thought those implications would work themselves out with a little time. Early social scientists probably believed that the human problems which had traditionally been dealt with theologically or philosophically could be done away with once we applied the scientific method—just as we got a whole lot better at growing food once we stopped praying for rain and started plowing. I take Cohen to be expressing exactly this optimism when he writes of efforts to incorporate social science into the law schools: “The first steps taken are clumsy and evoke smiles of sympathy or roars of laughter from critics of diverse temperaments. The will to walk persists” (834). In spite of what we can infer to be the initial failures of the social sciences to predict outcomes accurately, Cohen maintains faith in their eventual efficacy.
So I am guessing that Cohen probably thought that the issue I have raised—judges exercising arbitrary moral authority—would eventually fade as the social sciences did a better and better job of mapping human behavior and predicting outcomes. Psychology would eventually provide us with a very clear understanding of human desires, and economics would reveal how to manipulate capital to effectively maximize the fulfillment of those desires. Value judgments (often masked as transcendental concepts) would increasingly be displaced by factual ones as social science became more effective. And the judge, armed with the scientific method, would be perfectly competent to add up the facts.
Of course, it hasn't exactly happened this way. Decades later, with the social scientific paradigm increasingly prevalent, we still are not sure how to get along with one another. Sure, there has been some progress: we can now use science to intelligibly explore our own sexuality, or even the nature of God, in pretty amazing ways. Economics may even help us solve global warming. But nonetheless, we don't seem to be anywhere near the kind of systemization of human behavior which I believe would be necessary to democratically implement Cohen's legal realism. We may be able to better understand our sexuality or spirituality, but without the ability to objectively weigh these goods against one another (I'm not sold on Happiness Formulas), or measure the cost of pursuing one good at the expense of others, the realistic judge will inevitably be left to make subjective value judgments whenever conflicting values arise. And when judges decide people's values for them, it inevitably disempowers them. That's part of the reason why Cohen advocates legal realism in the first place.
Furthermore, social science often produces conflicting evidence. Judges today can pick and choose statistics to justify their own policy choices just as easily as judges in Holmes' day could pick and choose their transcendental legal concepts. In a world where ideologically-aligned think tanks generate studies to justify prior positions, this comes as no surprise.
I've pointed out a problem with Cohen's theory, but it's hard to deny that scientific methods are useful to judges, and there does seem to be something to Cohen's demystification of transcendental legal concepts. It would be worth exploring the steps that could be taken to mitigate the anti-democratic implications of a realistic court. Consider the Supreme Court: imposing term limits on Supreme Court Justice positions might bring the decisions of the court a little closer to the people, but a higher turnover rate on the Court might lead to decreased certainty as to what the law is. It seems like there's a lot of this kind of thinking to do, at all levels of the judicial system. |
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