features of the Israeli Court’s, as well as other courts, attitude toward the con-
stitutional text. As such this heuristic is not hermetically sealed against inad-
The Platonic Conception of the Israeli Constitution
295
heuristic that can be used to describe the phenomenon I wish to describe.
In this last section I wish to explain this choice and defend it from possible
objections. I will review three main objections.
One objection may stem from the difficulty of accepting the metaphysics of
the Platonic account. According to Plato, the Ideas or true Forms really exist.
They are not just an interpretative construct, but actual entities in the world.
This makes the Platonic philosophy implausible to many. Other accounts
which resemble the Platonic account evade this difficulty by not adopting
its metaphysics. Such is, for example, Michael Moore’s idea of “functional
kinds” which he uses to describe the law.
75
My reply is, first, that using the
Platonic account as a heuristic does not require adopting it as truth. I argue
that the relationship between text and the ideal (or template) constitution
resembles the relationship between Matter and Idea. This does not mean that
the ideal constitution actually exists as a real entity. Second, as mentioned
earlier, the adoption of the Platonic account for the analogy is not a necessary
one, and does not exclude other effective analogies. It is, however, advanta-
geous to other possible heuristic accounts (such as Moore’s functional kinds),
even if those might be less philosophically demanding, because of its simplic-
ity and ability to catch the public imagination. Plato and his idealism are well
known cultural constructs, and are therefore effective in making the point if,
as I hope, they resemble closely enough the phenomenon I wish to describe.
Other possible objections can address the inadequacies in the analogy,
some of which have already been discussed. I will discuss here two. First, one
may ask how far does the analogy go – do all constitutional rights have an ideal
Form? Does the ideal Form of a constitution include all institutional arrange-
ments that constitutions have, some of which are very technical? The answer
to these questions is that this is a matter of degree, and that while there may be
borderline cases, some examples fall clearly either on the side of being part of
the ideal Form or not. For example, the central human rights, such as equal-
ity, political freedom, freedom of conscience are quite clearly (in the eyes of
those to whom I assign the Platonic conception, such as Justice Barak) part
of the ideal Form of the constitution. Such is also the institution of judicial
review itself. However, other rights may be viewed as contingent or culturally
based, and therefore not part of the ideal Form, such as, for example, the right
to bear arms in the American Constitution.
76
The same may apply to some
institutional
arrangements, such as the type of judicial review adopted (e.g.,
75
See Michael Moore, “The Semantics of Judging” (1980) 54
Southern California Law Review
151; Michael Moore, “Law as a Functional Kind”, in Robert George (ed.) Natural Law Theo-
ries (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992). I thank Larry Solum for this point.
76
The Constitution of the United States, Amendment 2.