John Austin Philosopher

This article is about the legal philosopher. For other uses, see John Austin (disambiguation).John Austin (3 March 1790, Creeting Mill, Suffolk – 1 December 1859, Weybridge, Surrey) was a noted British jurist and published extensively concerning the philosophy of law and jurisprudence.Austin served with the British Army in Sicily and Malta, but sold his officer's commission to study law. He became a member of the Bar during 1818. He discontinued his law practice soon after, devoted himself to the study of law as a science, and became Professor of Jurisprudence in the University of London (now University College London) 1826-33. Thereafter he served on various Royal Commissions.His publications had a profound influence on English jurisprudence.They include The Province of Jurisprudence Determined (1832), and Lectures on Jurisprudence.On 24 August 1819, Austin married Sarah Taylor, who also became an author, at St George Colegate, Norwich.He also introduced command theory and sovereignty theory.

Personal facts

John Austin
Birth dateMarch 03, 1790
Birth place
Suffolk
Date of deathDecember 01, 1859
Place of death
Weybridge
Era
19th-century philosophy
Main interest
Jurisprudence

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Philosopher

influenced
influenced by
Jeremy Bentham
philosophical school
Legal positivism
region
Western philosophy

John Austin on Wikipedia