Helge
Dedek's "A Particle of Freedom: Natural Law Thought and the Kantian Theory of Transfer by Contract" is on SSRN:
Modern
contract law theorists frequently invoke Kantian ideas to conceptualize
contract as a form of immediate transfer. The Kantian theory of contract itself
is eclectic: Kant makes use of the main conceptual building blocks of Natural Law
(in particular Grotian) contract doctrine – promise and transfer. Yet Kant
re-arranges and adapts them to his own epistemology and conceptual system. I
submit that because of this connection, additional light can be shed on Kant’s
theory of contract by placing it in the context of contemporary Natural Law
discourse. One of the most outspoken critics of contract theory in the Grotian
tradition was then famous (and now apocryphal) legal philosopher Theodor
Schmalz. Schmalz faulted Natural Law thought for conceptualizing contract as
transfer by fallaciously – “subreptively” – explaining the normative event of
creating an obligation through the model of the empirical transfer of physical
objects. Kant’s theory reads like a response to this critique: Kant avoids
modelling contract on the transfer of property. Rather, he explains any
transfer as contractual, brought about by a unified will.
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