Bray on The Influence of the Catholic Intellectual Tradition on the Common Law @NDLaw @BrillPublishing
Samuel L. Bray, Notre Dame Law School, is publishing The Influence of the Catholic Intellectual Tradition on the Common Law in Faith in Law, Law in Faith (Rafael Domingo, Gary S. Hauk, and Timothy P. Jackson eds., Brill) (Forthcoming). Here is the abstract.
This essay considers the influence of the Catholic intellectual tradition on the common law. As a preliminary matter, the essay notes that the term “Catholic intellectual tradition” is of recent vintage, though its referent is much older. It identifies three mechanisms of influence: inheriting, conversing, and generating. For inheriting, the essay notes that some common law doctrines, such as the Chancellor’s conscience, were inherited from the Catholic intellectual tradition. For conversing, the essay notes the conversation across confessional boundaries in early modern Europe, which was facilitated by the use of Latin and scholastic curricula well after the Reformation. This point, while familiar to early modern intellectual historians because of revisionist work over the last quarter century, may be surprising to legal scholars. Finally, for generating, this essay shows that the common law judges, by their own lights, were participants in the Catholic intellectual tradition. This is demonstrated, for example, by analysis of Chief Justice Vaughan’s opinion in Thomas v. Sorrell (1673/4). When this intellectual tradition is viewed without anachronistic narrowness, its influence on the common law is substantial.
Download the essay from SSRN at the link.