The term “law” has always had to do double duty. On the one hand,
laws are made through a political
process.
On the other hand, laws
are discovered as a system already operating in the world. The legislative
output of Congress is the first sort of law; the laws of thermodynamics
are the second. When we focus on the social, however, the
line becomes blurred. The social order is the site of our legislative
projects,
yet the very point of social science is to discover systemic
laws operating within the community independently
of anyone’s
project
of law creation.1 My ambition in this book, in simplest terms,
is to explore this ambiguity in law as it shows itself in American
political
and legal
thought over the long nineteenth century,
the
period from the American founding to the Lochner Court of the
early twentieth century.
Over the course of that century,
there
is
a general shift from thinking of law—particularly
constitutional
law—as the product of a project
to thinking of law as an immanent
system.