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The Laws of Men & Love - A Layman's
Philosophical Analysis of the Law
By Evan Lyn |
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I know a lawyer, and today he said to me, “The law
is everything. It is society.” When I heard this, my heart told me,
“That is not true.” But I didn't know why.
When I got home that night, I went to sleep at midnight. I woke up at
4AM, and I remembered what the lawyer said, and what my heart said. My
mind searched my heart and the world for the answer, and this is what
I found:
The law does two things only: to limit what you can do to other
people, and to establish the minimum of what you must do to other
people. The law lives only in these two places - but love does not
exist in either of these places.
For example, I can not say bad things about you, steal from you, hit
you, or kill you – even if I think it will make me happy. These are
the limits that the law sets as to what I can do to other people (in
law books, maybe they are called restrictive laws). There are also
laws that force me to do certain things.
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If I am a man, I have to pay taxes and serve in the army,
and if I am a father, I have to give food to my son – even if it doesn't
make me happy. These are the minimums the law sets as to what I have to do
to other people (in law books, maybe they are called obligatory laws). But
more than that, I don't have to do: I don't have to donate money to the
government, or buy toys for my son if I don't want to.
The restrictive laws can be simplified into one rational principle: “You can
do whatever you want as long as you don't hurt other people.” This is
actually the way most people view their happiness and freedom. You are free
to do whatever makes you happy as long as it doesn't get in the way of other
people. The obligatory laws can also be simplified into one rational
principle: “You have to do a few certain things to certain other people, but
more than that you don't have to do.”
This is actually the way most people view their
responsibilities. Combine these two ways, and you see that this is how most
people live their life – how they do the things they want, and how they do
the things they don't want to do. According to the law, being a good citizen
means balancing the pursuit of your own happiness with fulfilling your
responsibilities to others.
But if I do nothing to you, that is okay too. When other people say bad
things about you, or steal from you, hit you, or kill you, I can ignore you
and it is not against the law. If I don't care about you, if I let you
suffer and be unhappy, that is not against the law. This is how many people
use the word “respect”: I won't bother you, so don't bother me. But this is
not
love. The same is true for the minimums: I have to pay taxes and serve
in the army, but I do not have to love my country. I have to give food to my
son, but I do not have to love him.
The law does not teach you how to love or to have a heart
– or tell you that you should have a heart. I can be a law-abiding citizen
and break no laws, and yet have no heart. According to the law,
it is legal to not care, to not love.
That is why listening to the law and the principles of reason teach you only
how to think about yourself. Most of it tells you what you cannot take from
other people. I cannot take your money, body, life, or privacy. When you
take too much, the law speaks and comes alive, and seeks to punish you.
But the law does not teach you how to share with other people: if I am nice
to you, say good things about you, help you, give you money, or love you,
the law does not reward you. When you give more than is required by law, the
law is quiet and does nothing - it is dead. The law does not exist in the
places of love. When the heart is dead, the law is alive, and when the heart
is alive, the law is dead. The heart exists in places beyond the law. Listen
only to the law, and your heart will die.
Listen to your heart and the hearts of others, and give, and your heart will
live. Happiness and love cannot exist when two people try to take from each
other, or even if only one person gives and the other takes. The result is
court – in fact, any time when someone goes to court, it's usually because
they want to take something from somebody who doesn't want to give it.
Happiness and love exist when two people or two sides
give and go beyond the two rational principles of law – when they try to
give and do more than is required. Two people who give stay outside of
court, because they go beyond the laws of men – for they live from the heart
through the laws of love.
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Article Source :
www.womenbrands.com
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