Publication Date

2024

Publication Title

Public Law & Legal Theory

Abstract

Originalism is called a “family” of theories. If that’s true, they all suffer from a congenital malady: the problem of selection. This vulnerability afflicts every branch of the family, whether we speak of original intentions originalism, original public meaning originalism, original methods originalism, or original law originalism—any originalism that descends from Attorney General Ed Meese’s legendary speech before the American Bar Association in 1985.2 To the extent originalism of any variety purports to make descriptive, falsifiable claims about language, history, tra- dition, practice, or law, all of them must confront problems common to any empirical project—what data to collect, how to code that data, over what time period and how long to collect data, and what conclusions to draw from that data.

This Essay examines the problem of selection with any originalist theory and what it means for constitutional adjudication. Part I surveys the major branches of originalism, explains how each share a commitment to the pursuit of objective, knowable, falsifiable fact, and then use that fact as a fixed point to constrain discretion. Part II discusses how each of these theories are vulnerable to methodological challenges familiar to all empirical projects. Part III explores the implications of these methodological challenges for originalism in particular and for constitutional doctrine and theory more generally.

Number

852


Included in

Law Commons

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