Reading guide for 1/20: John Austin, The Province of Jurisprudence Determined, selection from lecture I
(Culver, pp. 96-105)
 

Most of the introductory material preceding this selection in Culver concerns H. L. A. Hart, who we won’t read for a few weeks, but look at the first paragraph (p. 89), which has some biographical information about Austin.

The content of Austin’s work makes him a legal positivist, but the style of his work has a label, too—“analytic jurisprudence.” His approach to understanding the law is, as much as anything, an effort to analyze legal concepts and express his analyses in careful definitions. Your key task in thinking about Austin will be, first, to understand his system of definitions and, second, to ask yourself whether it is correct and illuminating. Correctness applies primarily to the definition of law he ends up with since many of his other definitions will introduce special technical senses of words; the test of those other definitions will be whether the concepts he introduces with them are useful in thinking about the law.

Austin’s first lecture has a lot to say about law in the specific sense that Aquinas calls “human law” and Austin calls “positive law,” but what he defines at this stage is a broader concept that applies to other things as well. The notes below distinguish three parts of the lecture and suggest things to look for in each.