The Reading Room

A source

The Life of the Law

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.·1881·Boston

The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience.
Holmes opened The Common Law with the sentence that organized his whole understanding of how law works. Law is not a machine that grinds out answers by pure deduction, he argued, but a living thing shaped by the lived needs of a society over time. A Civil War veteran who had seen how far reality strays from theory, he trusted experience over abstraction. The Courts lens, in seven words: the law grows because the people under it do.