Lesson 2 Philo of Law
Lesson 2 Philo of Law
and
Philosophy Enduring
A prolegomena to Philosophy.
Later on, we shall explore the technical meets and bounds of Philosophy and
why, when we speak of it, do we almost always refer to Western Philosophy,
the Western tradition of thought.
Fragmentation in Modernity.
the disregard of our inherent human rights and dignity (of having been
fashioned in Imago Dei), and
But while we might stumble and fall in arriving at correct answers, the
fostering of Philosophy as a way of life, our steadfast search for truth, will
lead us to ask the right questions that will set us up ever more farther from
the expedient and truth-deficient axioms of the modern times and ever more
closer to the timeless yet timely and eternal principles of the True, the
Good and the Beautiful – and as law students, we may add, the Just.
This love of wisdom, the reflective grasp of what and how we know, is the
mode through which we can carefully examine whether we are treading in the
[Path of reason]
footsteps of our Master through the narrow gate or we have wandered to the
wide gate that leads to destruction.
A Return to Philosophy.
Thus, the Jurisprudence that we are talking about here is about Knowledge of
the Law as bequeathed to us by the different schools of thought, or simply
put, Legal Theory.
In this course, we shall attempt to distill concepts about the law. Its:
elements (what are the components for the legal ordering of a society),
For now, it suffices for us to explore first the two separate and distinct
but interrelated concepts that make up the course: (1) Philosophy and (2)
Law.
Admittedly, while the Philippines is a Civil Law country, i.e., all our
laws are codified/written [Article 2, NCC; Tañada v. Tuvera], our legal
system is a mixture of customary usage, Roman (civil law) and Anglo-
American (common law) systems, and Islamic law.
As you have read already, the civil code system refers to a legal system based
on coded laws. Some notable examples are:
The common law system is based on case law or judge-made law that relies
on precedents set by judges in a court case. It is characteristic of English-
speaking countries such as Britain, United States, Canada, Ireland, Australia
and India.
But, as philosophers who are interested deep into the “why” of things,
we might ask “why do we trace the provenance of our thought, culture and
laws predominantly back to the West”?
Case Readings
QS:
LAW
(1) Discuss the case. What are the facts? What are the issues?
(2) What are the grounds for the declaration of IPRA’s and its
Implementing Rules and Regulation’s unconstitutionality?
(3) How did the Supreme Court resolve the issue?
(4) How did Justice Puno resolve the issue?
PHILO
(1) What gives Spain the right to lay claim over our indigenous
ancestors’ ancestral lands and domains? (Doctrine of Dominium and
Discovery and Conquest)
(2) Is it lawful or at least valid for Spain to do so?
The reason why I assigned the case of Cruz and Europa as part of the
readings in this course is that J. Puno there informs us about the:
In short, it tells us about our indigenous past and the first tranche of our
mind’s westernization brought about by Spain’s discovery and conquest of
our lands.
Here, we must note two rival traditions: (1) Spain’s and (2) our Indigenous
Peoples’.
To determine what gives Spain the right to lay claim over our indigenous
ancestors’ ancestral lands and domains and the justification for its validity,
we have to qualify whose standards of legality and validity we are using:
that of Spain or that of our early ancestors prior to our westernization.
From the point of view of our ancestors, Spain dispossessed them of their
historical and natural rights to the communal ownership, utilization and
enjoyment of their land and natural resources.
Before the time of Western contact, the Philippine archipelago was peopled
largely by the Negritos, Indonesians and Malays.
Indians — whose influence found their way into the religious-cultural aspect
of our pre-colonial society.
Living then was primordially and essentially about subsistence. Our ancestors
settled beside bodies of water mainly, we are told, because they came here
using the boat-system, the balangai system. They were the coastal and
riverine communities. Some of them went into the hinterland as well.
The generally benign tropical climate and the largely uniform flora and fauna
favored similarities, not differences.
Those times, our culture was fundamentally Malayan in form and structure
and our language can be traced back to the Austronesian parent-stock.
As with every early civilizations not only in our side of the globe, but
throughout, we fashioned concepts and beliefs about the world that we see
and theorized about that which we don’t see or at least not understand.
We had our distinct religion and religious expressions and beliefs. That
early, we already had the premonition of the soul’s immortality after death.
We posited a Supreme Being, Bathalang Maykapal; a host of other deities
according to rank and, we might suppose, the promptness and manner they
responded to our supplications; and environmental spirits.
What is more, we adored the sun, the moon, nature and wildlife, venerated
almost any object that was close to daily life and indicated the importance of
the relationship between man and the object of nature.
Our notion or view of the world around us that influenced our mode of
thinking and living was born out of pre-scientific and spontaneous
cognition of reality.
The Franciscan friar Juan de Plasencia gave us a glimpse into this political
and social system of communal organization. He said:
“These [datus] were chiefs of but few people, as many as a
hundred houses and even less than thirty; and this they call in
Tagalog, barangay. And what was inferred from this name is
that their being called this was because, since these are known
from their language to be Malayos, when they came to this land,
the head of barangay was taken for a datu, and even today it is
still ascertained that one whole barangay was originally one
family of parents and children, slaves and relatives.”
It’s a “war of every man against every man” for survival. “The only laws that
exist in this state of nature are not covenants forged between people but
principles based on self-preservation.” In this state, there can be no justice,
commerce or even culture.
While in this state, humans are free, equal and independent, they are obliged
under the law of nature to respect each other’s right to life, liberty and
property.
Thus, it can be said that Locke advocated one of the elementary principles of
political liberalism: “there can be no subjection to power without consent —
though once political society has been founded, citizens are obligated to
accept the decisions of a majority of their number,” made via the legislature
whose members, ultimately, are chosen by the people.
This, however, had a negative side effect. Rousseau observed that this could
give rise to negative and destructive passions such as jealousy and vice.
This is compounded by the advent of ownership of private property.
This is where the role of the Civil Society for Rousseau comes in:
(1) to provide peace for everyone and
(2) to ensure the right to property for anyone lucky enough to have
possessions.
Our history books and the case of Cruz and Europa v. Secretary of
Environment and Natural Resources tell us, however, that “the social order
was an extension of the family.” Rightly so, and for good reasons.
Humans don’t just spring out of nowhere. We are born into a family,
into a particular tradition and we are nurtured by our kin. As we go through
the stages of human development, our view of reality, or our world-view, is
shaped by what we have gained from them, by instruction or by
observation.
Let us call this as our “Rationality” — from the word “ratio” or “reason.”
Thus, our ancestors evolved early laws that were either customary or written.
Customary laws were handed down orally from generation to generation and
constituted the bulk of the laws of the barangay. They were preserved in
songs and chants and in the memory of the elder persons in the community.
(1) The Maragtas Code by Datu Sumakwel of Sulu at about 1250 A.D.
(2) The Muslim Code of Luwaran; and
(3) The Principal Code of Sulu.
“Such events, when fully recognized, demand creative solutions, and it may
happen that some person or group will discover what appears to be a more
adequate response to those problems.”
To the extent that we adopt these new solutions, approaches or view of things
and pass them on to subsequent generations (for better or for worse), the
rationality of those responsible for the new approach or view becomes
“tradition-constitutive.”
This happened with our ancestors with the coming here of the Chinese
traders and Indians.
It also happened when Islam was introduced into the archipelago in the 13th
Century, particularly in Maguindanao, that led to the establishment of the
Sultanate of Sulu which claimed jurisdiction over territorial areas represented
today by Tawi-tawi, Sulu, Palawan, Basilan and Zamboanga.
This leads us now to Spain’s point of view at the time of the Spanish
Conquest of the Philippines.
The pristine order of things took a different turn in the 16th century.
the naming of our islands of Leyte and Samar as Filipinas, a name which
the future colony will later be known, by the Spanish expeditionary
commander Ruy López de Villalobos in 1542 and
kindled the flames that, later on, would not only incinerate and relegate
our pre-colonial tradition to ashes, but also set up the conditions
necessary for the westernization of our minds – for our “consciousness” to
adapt the Western systems of thought and culture, an institution heavily
founded upon the Judeo-Christian religion which, at the turn of the 1 st
century's beginning and until today, is still up and running.
Eventually, Spain conquered the majority part of our islands and from
1565 to 1898, maintained sovereignty over them as a gobernacion of the
Viceroyalty of Mexico, Spain's American empire.
“For the greater part of these 333-odd years, the Philippines, like all the other
Spanish colonies, was chiefly governed under three main laws: the Siete
Partidas, the Nueva Recopilción, and the Recopilción de las Leyes de las
Indias.”
Codigo Penal de 1870, the predecessor of our Revised Penal Code, and
So, what gave Spain the right and justification for their actions were
their notions of:
In the case, we are told of the State’s power of dominium — the capacity of
the State to own or acquire property by virtue of "discovery" and conquest,
which extended to their exercise of sovereignty not only over our islands, but
also over all the Indios.
This was the foundation for the early Spanish decrees embracing the feudal
theory of the Regalian Doctrine or jura regalia.
Consequently, all lands became the exclusive patrimony and dominion of the
Spanish Crown.
How did this come about?
Our story begins in the high towards the late Middle Ages, particularly in the
11th to 15th century.
By that time, after the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century
A.D., Christianity had already established itself as one of, if not the,
dominant tradition that has the authority by Divine Right (that
is,______________) to regulate the affairs of the people, at least in Europe
and by extension, over the lands they discovered and subdued.
(2) Hostiensis, a canon lawyer, however, opined that with the coming of
Christ, every office and all governmental authority and all lordship and
jurisdiction was taken from every infidel lawfully and with just
This growing consensus among the European powers was bolstered with the
proclamation of three Papal Bulls from 1452 to 1493.
Dum Diversas (1452) and Romanus Pontifex (1455) issued by Pope
Nicholas V, granting and confirming to the King of Portugal “full and free
permission to invade, search out, capture, and subjugate the Saracens and
pagans and any other unbelievers and enemies of Christ wherever they may
be, as well as their kingdoms , duchies, countries, principalities, and other
property…”
In essence, the Pope gave Spain the rights of conquest and dominion over one
side of the globe, and Portugal over the other.
The Treaty of Tordesillas divided the world into two exploration and
colonizing areas: the Spanish and the Portuguese.
So it was that we fell into the hands of Spain. And so it was that the
tradition-constitutive rationality of the West had an initial spar with our
indigenous tradition-constituted rationality, making way for our
rationality’s initial Westernization, which will undergo a full scale
transformation with the advent of Secularism brought about by the United
States into our lands.
(a) the cooling off of religious wars, that would eventually give birth to the
separation of the church and the state that we know of today;
(b) the rise of modern science with the dissent of Nicolas Copernicus
against the long-held Geocentrism, proposing in lieu thereof his Heliocentric
model of the universe or, at least, the solar system;
Galileo Galilei's confirmation thereof using the vivid lens of his telescope;
Awed by the starry heavens above and the moral law beneath, Immanuel
Kant articulated the rallying cry of the European Enlightenment Era: In Latin:
Sapere Aude! Which can be translated in English as: Dare to know!
To him:
(1) every human being has a duty to think for him or herself and not merely
accept doctrines on authority;
(2) this duty is interwoven in a complex way with a realm of public
discussion; and
(3) the doctrines of the churches, and other voluntary institutions, need to be
mutable.
So it was that this modern era, proud of its accomplishments, “regarded itself
as the period that took Europe from the 'darkness' of religious dogmatism,
social hierarchy, political absolutism, and an indifferent understanding of
nature, into the light of free inquiry, egalitarianism, liberalism and a deep
and far reaching natural science.”
Professor MacIntyre (After Virtue) commented that the “self,” that is to say,
the modern self, had already been “liberated from all those outmoded
forms of social organization which had imprisoned it simultaneously within a
belief in a theistic and teleological world order and within those hierarchical
structures which attempted to legitimate themselves as part of such a world
order.”
Philippine Enlightenment
Creole Nationalism
The most famous of them were the Three martyred priests: Padre Mariano
Gomez, Padre Jose Burgos and Padre Jacinto Zamora.
We can deduce that, on top of their natural inclination and advocacy for
equality of rights among the Catholic priests and the secularization of the
clergy in the Philippines, they have encountered the Scholastic Legal
Tradition of Natural Law which was being taught at the Faculties of
Philosophy, Canon Law and Civil Law (for Padre Zamora), when they
entered the auspices of the University of Santo Tomas to study for priesthood
in the Seminary.
As a legal philosophy, it forms the basis and foundations for legal traditions,
it being a body of rules prescribed by an authority superior to that of the state
and intended to protect individual rights from infringement by other
individuals, nation-states, or political orders.
GomBurZa’s advocacy for equality, however, was met with heavy opposition
and malicious criminal imputation against them for taking a supposed active
role in the Cavity Mutiny. Eventually, they were sentenced to death by
garrote — or strangulation.
Be that as it may, their testament fanned the embers of hope that animated
Dr. Jose Rizal’s sequel to Noli Me Tangere, El Filibusterismo, which novels,
in turn, opened the minds of the reading public to the idea of freedom and
liberty from the corrupted and corruptible religious and monarchial
hegemony.
So began the rise of our Ilustrados who encountered in Spain the Liberal
Ideals of the Enlightenment.
(1) the idea of the state as the institution responsible for the fulfilment of
the law, that is, the state has the duty to provide the conditions in which
individuals can achieve their goals in different spheres of life (education,
economic, scientific, religious) — what we now know as Parens Patriae.
(2) the idea of self-government of society — a position that views people as
social beings by nature (humans are naturally sociable) and that via free
association can fulfill all their objectives, without the state having to
intervene.
(4) More importantly, krausism iterated the very idea of the primacy of the
Rule of Law (Rule of Law; taken from the Kantian concept of
Reechstaat).
(5) Finally, they considered that forms of government are but “incidental
details” — They believed that – according to Ahrens – there was no
preference between the classical forms of monarchy or republic.
What is important is that society develops while guaranteeing the
freedoms and rights of individuals. In other words, that what mattered
was not the form of the state, but the content, that society was sovereign
in a context of freedom and democracy in keeping with the culture of
every people at every historical moment.
The Ilustrados used these liberal principles in their struggle to fight for the
political rights of Filipinos, which were supposed to be the same to that
possessed by Spaniards. Also they aimed to secularize the parishes in the
Philippines, and to render the Philippines a province that availed itself of
equality under the Spanish system.
We built our society upon this foundation. And so upon this framework, our
mind operates.
Thus, when we think about law and philosophy, we almost always approach
it using the Western definitions, criteria and categories.
“He who has a taste for every sort of knowledge and who is curious to learn
and is never satisfied may justly be termed a Philosopher.” – Plato, Republic.
Value Theory
to
Natural Law
to
Civil Law
to
Virtue Theory
As a prelude, though, let's travel back in and through time and take a
quick glance at how far we have come as a State.
History of Cognition
Development of Philosophy
The Reign of Theology
The Branching out of the Sciences
But before reaching that stage, that is, when we are infants and during the
early stages of our development, and after that, meaning, when we reach past
the age of self-reliance into seniority and senility, we need the support of our
kin.
From families and tribes, we entered into a new social order — the pueblo
tell us that
But before reaching that stage, that is, when we are infants and during the
early stages of our development, and after that, meaning, when we reach past
the age of self-reliance into seniority and senility, we need the support of our
kin.
The social order was an extension of the family with chiefs embodying the
higher unity of the community.
The written laws were those that the chieftain and his elders promulgated
from time to time as the necessity arose. — Thus, the role of necessity.
aaa
The role of necessity and conflict Now living together side by side in close-
knit communities, conflicts naturally arise.
“The operation of these laws – taken separately or in relation to one another
– was never very clear. The result was, frequently, confusion, inefficiency,
corruption, and delay.” The injustices and inequities brought about by the
dynamics of this mess and the abuses of civil and religious authorities later
led our people to revolt against mother Spain.