powers of Parliament. Importantly, the famous metaphor of the invisible con-
articulate and justify the text of the constitution, as advised by the Dworkinian
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Gábor Attila Tóth
In short, the doctrine was understood as a tool for implicitly amending the
text of the constitution in the name of constitutional ideas, as happened in the
Capital Punishment Case: the reasoning implied that the Court opposed the
text of the Article 54(1) that prohibited the “arbitrary deprivation” of one’s life
and dignity, and logically, did not exclude the possibility that someone may be
deprived of life and human dignity in a nonarbitrary way. The Court deduced,
however, that any deprivation of them was conceptually “arbitrary.”
This is a clear departure from a moral reading that also presupposes that the
bases of the constitutional norms are moral principles that justify them. In this
respect the Dworkinian approach is in line with the famous phrase from Chief
Justice Marshall that it must never be forgotten that it is the Constitution that
judges are expounding.
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It is hard to imagine a constructive and coherent
application of the constitution without commitment to principles and rules of
the visible constitutional text.
A further attribute of the invisible constitution doctrine is its hierarchical
nature, with an aristocratic flavor. The centralized model of constitutional
adjudication, the separation from the ordinary court system, and the erga
omnes constitutional interpretative authority can certainly be associated with
hierarchy. Similarly to the Kelsenian hierarchy of legal norms, with the con-
stitution at its peak, in the field of institutions the constitutional court is the
highest in rank. However, the concurring opinion of the Chief Justice named –
or perhaps better to say degraded – the Parliament, the constitution-making
authority, as being motivated by actual political interests. Thus, not only
direct, popular forms of democratic decision-making, but also indirect, repre-
sentative forms were regarded with ambiguity. Sólyom himself believed that
the symbolic completion of the democratic transition with a brand new con-
stitution was unnecessary because the Court, as the highest-ranking constitu-
tional body, could replace the constitution-making authority by its principled
judgments.
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As regards the legitimacy of this kind of judicial attitude, many advocates of
a powerful constitutional court engaged in endless debates with those schol-
ars, e.g., Bruce Ackerman, who were doubtful about the initial achievements
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