The Theory of Rules
by Karl N. Llewellyn, edited by Frederick Schauer
University of Chicago Press, 2011
Cloth: 978-0-226-48795-3 | Electronic: 978-0-226-48797-7
DOI: 10.7208/chicago/9780226487977.001.0001
ABOUT THIS BOOKAUTHOR BIOGRAPHYREVIEWSTABLE OF CONTENTS

ABOUT THIS BOOK

Karl N. Llewellyn was one of the founders and major figures of legal realism, and his many keen insights have a central place in American law and legal understanding. Key to Llewellyn’s thinking was his conception of rules, put forward in his numerous writings and most famously in his often mischaracterized declaration that they are “pretty playthings.” Previously unpublished, The Theory of Rules is the most cogent presentation of his profound and insightful thinking about the life of rules.

This book frames the development of Llewellyn’s thinking and describes the difference between what rules literally prescribe and what is actually done, with the gap explained by a complex array of practices, conventions, professional skills, and idiosyncrasies, most of which are devoted to achieving a law’s larger purpose rather than merely following the letter of a particular rule. Edited, annotated, and with an extensive analytic introduction by leading contemporary legal scholar Frederick Schauer, this rediscovered work contains material not found elsewhere in Llewellyn’s writings and will prove a valuable contribution to the existing literature on legal realism.

AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY

Karl N. Llewellyn (1893 –1962) was one of the major figures in American legal thought and professor of law at Columbia Law School and the University of Chicago Law School. Frederick Schauer is the David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Virginia.

REVIEWS

“Important on several levels—biographical, historical, and jurisprudential—Karl N. Llewellyn’s The Theory of Rules will immediately claim a place in the corpus of American legal theory.  Llewellyn’s prose here is less precious and idiosyncratic than in many of his other writings, and the remaining mysteries are dispelled by Frederick Schauer’s marvelously lucid introduction and detailed notes. As to several of the core problems of legal theory—the nature of rules, the differences between rules and standards, the roles of literalism and purpose in legal interpretation, the prediction theory of law—Llewellyn and Schauer have jointly produced an indispensable text.”

— Adrian Vermeule, Harvard Law School

“With Frederick Schauer's recovery and annotation of Karl Llewellyn's unpublished manuscript, The Theory of Rules, an important statement of the jurisprudential perspective of one of the leading American Realist scholars is made available. Llewellyn's contributions are enhanced and made accessible by Schauer's valuable introduction and notes. The result is a fortunate interaction of the work of one of the great figures in American jurisprudence with that of one of the nation's leading contemporary scholars.”

— G. Edward White, University of Virginia School of Law

“Karl Llewellyn was one of the most creative and significant theorists of American law in the twentieth century, along with jurists and scholars like Benjamin Cardozo, Lon Fuller, and Richard Posner. The recovery of his never-before-published manuscript of The Theory of Rules is an important contribution to the intellectual history of twentieth-century legal thought. Frederick Schauer has done exemplary editorial work on the volume, both by supplying the missing scholarly apparatus the text required and through his substantial introduction, which expertly and lucidly surveys the main themes of The Theory of Rules, and locates them in terms of their jurisprudential significance today.”

— Brian Leiter, University of Chicago Law School

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Editor’s Introduction

Editor’s Acknowledgments

Editorial Notes

The Theory of Rules

Preface- History and Acknowledgments

Chapter I. The Frame of the Discussion

Chapter II. Rules of Law: Command and Prediction

Chapter III. Rules of Law: The Propositional Form

Chapter IV. Rule of Thumb and Principle

Chapter V. Rule of Conduct, and the Legal Order

Chapter VI. Our Situational Concepts

Chapter VII. The Advocate’s Leeway

Chapter VIII. Stabilities within the Leeways

The Remaining Chapters

Index