supposed (or otherwise supported) by the text.
communicative content until such time as the content becomes known.
including effects on the rule of law.
defeasibility conditions in this chapter.
Originalism and the Invisible Constitution
73
Constraint as Consistency can be thought of as a minimalist version of the
Constraint Principle – the version that almost all originalists can accept and
that (by stipulation) “nonoriginalists” reject.
23
Some originalists may affirm
more robust versions of constraint: for example, some originalists might require
that all the content of constitutional doctrine must be identical to or logically
implied by the communicative content of the constitutional text. That version
of constraint would be inconsistent with any notion of an invisible or unwrit-
ten constitution, because it leaves no room for extra-textual sources to play a
role in the articulation of constitutional law.
Together the Fixation Thesis and the Constraint Principle (in the form
of “Constraint as Consistency”) express the core of contemporary originalist
thought. These are the ideas upon which almost all originalists agree as the
minimum core of originalism. As the historical evolution of originalist thought
demonstrates, there is another topic upon which originalists disagree. We can
introduce this topic via a question: what determines original meaning? In this
chapter, I will focus on one answer to this question – the version of originalism
that is usually called “public meaning originalism.”
3.3. Public Meaning Originalism
The history of originalism includes a set of variations on the theme of original
meaning. Some originalists have emphasized the original intentions of the
framers, others the original understanding of the ratifiers, and others the origi-
nal public meaning of the constitutional text.
24
This chapter will adopt public
meaning originalism as the model version of originalism for two reasons. First,
public meaning originalism is the dominant form of originalism in contempo-
rary originalist scholarship.
25
Second, for reasons that I have explored at length
in other work, I believe that public meaning originalism is the best candidate
23
In the text, I stipulate that “originalism” is a family of theories unified by fixation and
constraint and that “nonoriginalism” refers to theories that reject constraint. A more adequate
account of the divide between originalists and nonoriginalists would acknowledge the possibility
of forms of nonoriginalism that reject the Fixation Thesis but accept the Constraint Principle.
Moreover, the word “originalism” is the subject of metalinguistic negotiation or contestation:
the meaning of the word is disputed. On the idea of metalinguistic negotiation, see David
Plunkett and Timothy Sundell, “Disagreement and the Semantics of Normative and Evalua-
tive Terms” (2013) 13 Philosophers’ Imprint 23; David Plunkett and Timothy Sundell, “Dwor-
kin’s Interpretivism and the Pragmatics of Legal Disputes” (2013) 19 Legal Theory
>3; David
Plunkett and Timothy Sundell, “Antipositivist Arguments from Legal Thought and Talk: The
Metalinguistic Response” in Graham Hubb and Douglas Lind (eds.), Pragmatism, Law, and
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: