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Problema anuario de filosofía y teoría del derecho
versión On-line ISSN 2448-7937versión impresa ISSN 2007-4387
Resumen
EDMUNDSON, William A.. "Because I Said So". Probl. anu. filos. teor. derecho [online]. 2013, n.7, pp.41-61. ISSN 2448-7937.
Political authority is the moral power to impose moral duties upon a perhaps unwilling citizenry. David Enoch has proposed that authority be understood as a matter of "robust" duty-giving. This paper argues that Enoch's conditions for attempted robust duty- or reason-giving are, along with his non-normative success condition, implausibly strong. Moreover, Enoch's attempt and normative-success conditions ignore two facts. The first is that success requires that citizens be tolerant of modest errors by the authority, which means that, in conditions of modest error, performing as directed must have a non-instrumental, intrinsic value. The second is that an attempt to exercise authority involves an intention to trigger a moral principle endowing conforming performances with intrinsic value. The mystery of political authority is the mystery of how official directives could possibly suffice to endow conforming performances with intrinsic value.
Palabras llave : Authority of Law; Political Authority; Practical Reason; Moral Obligations to Obey the Law; Legitimate Authorities; Norms.