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The Case of the Speluncean Explorers

Nine New Opinions

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Cover for The Case of the Speluncean Explorers
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Peter SuberFirst published 19983 editions

The book is built on the greatest fictitious legal case of all time, Lon Fuller's "The Case of the Speluncean Explorers," Harvard Law Review, vol. 62, no. 4 (1949) pp. 616-645. Four spelunkers (cave-explorers) in the Commonwealth of Newgarth were trapped in a cave by a landslide. After eating their limited stores of food, and approaching death by starvation, they made radio contact with the rescue team, which estimated that the rescue would take another 10 days. The men described their physical condition to physicians and asked whether they could survive another 10 days without food. The physicians thought that very unlikely. Then the spelunkers asked whether they could survive another 10 days if they killed and ate a member of their party. The physicians reluctantly answer that they could. Finally, the men asked whether they ought to kill and eat a member of their party, selected by lottery. No one at the rescue camp was willing to answer this question. The men turn off their radio, and some time later held a lottery, killed the loser, and ate him. They were eventually rescued and prosecuted for murder, which in Newgarth carries a mandatory death penalty. Are they guilty? Should they be executed? Fuller wrote five Supreme Court opinions on the case, exploring the facts from the perspectives of profoundly different legal principles. The result is a focused and concrete illustration of the range of Anglo-American legal philosophy at mid-century. Suber's nine new opinions bring this picture up to date with our own more diverse and turbulent jurisprudence half a century later. The book presupposes no knowledge of law or philosophy of law, and should be a painless, even enjoyable introduction to legal philosophy. More detail [here][1]. [1]: http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/writing/cse.htm

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First publish date 19981 credited authorSearch language english

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  • Peter Suber

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