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A Constitution of Many Minds: Why the Founding Document Doesn't Mean What It Meant Before
 
 
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A Constitution of Many Minds: Why the Founding Document Doesn't Mean What It Meant Before [Hardcover]

Cass R. Sunstein (Author)
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0691133379 978-0691133379 January 19, 2009

The future of the U.S. Supreme Court hangs in the balance like never before. Will conservatives or liberals succeed in remaking the court in their own image? In A Constitution of Many Minds, acclaimed law scholar Cass Sunstein proposes a bold new way of interpreting the Constitution, one that respects the Constitution's text and history but also refuses to view the document as frozen in time.

Exploring hot-button issues ranging from presidential power to same-sex relations to gun rights, Sunstein shows how the meaning of the Constitution is reestablished in every generation as new social commitments and ideas compel us to reassess our fundamental beliefs. He focuses on three approaches to the Constitution--traditionalism, which grounds the document's meaning in long-standing social practices, not necessarily in the views of the founding generation; populism, which insists that judges should respect contemporary public opinion; and cosmopolitanism, which looks at how foreign courts address constitutional questions, and which suggests that the meaning of the Constitution turns on what other nations do.

Sunstein demonstrates that in all three contexts a "many minds" argument is at work--put simply, better decisions result when many points of view are considered. He makes sense of the intense debates surrounding these approaches, revealing their strengths and weaknesses, and sketches the contexts in which each provides a legitimate basis for interpreting the Constitution today.

This book illuminates the underpinnings of constitutionalism itself, and shows that ours is indeed a Constitution, not of any particular generation, but of many minds.



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Editorial Reviews

Review


Applying . . . insights to the field of constitutional law, the book develops, in elegant and careful prose, a novel collection of arguments within their discipline. The author [has] raised a number of fresh and controversial issues, and, as a result, [his] work is certain to be widely read and much discussed. -- N.W. Barber, Texas Law Review



Sunstein has a knack for identifying the operative kernel of complex ideas in a way that allows the reader to see how an unfamiliar concept links seemingly disparate problems. -- Azuz Huq, New York Law Journal



We would do well to have more thinkers around like Sunstein, and better yet to have more of them on the Supreme Court. -- Leonard H. Becker, DC Lawyer Magazine

From the Inside Flap


"What distinguishes the most important minds is less the answers they offer than the questions they ask. Who but Cass Sunstein would think to ask what unites the arguments and assumptions of traditionalists, populists, and cosmopolitans in constitutional interpretation and elsewhere--and what influences the force of those arguments at different times and in different places? Exploring those questions with his characteristic elegance and insight, Sunstein--the most prolific and significant legal scholar of our time--has written a brilliant book for all seasons."--Laurence H. Tribe, Harvard Law School

"Sunstein combines diverse theories of constitutional interpretation into one coherent framework. That framework is captured by the book's title--A Constitution of Many Minds. This book is likely to be widely read and highly cited."--Kim Lane Scheppele, author of Legal Secrets

"Sunstein presents an elegant and fascinating argument, and he consistently tries to play fair with the views he is assessing. He covers many areas and has provocative things to say about them. A Constitution of Many Minds is a fine book that is sure to provoke much discussion."--Sanford Levinson, author of Our Undemocratic Constitution



Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (January 19, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691133379
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691133379
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #111,728 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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28 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Wisdom of Crowds and Courts, June 8, 2009
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This review is from: A Constitution of Many Minds: Why the Founding Document Doesn't Mean What It Meant Before (Hardcover)
Cass Sunstein publishes new material almost hourly, and I am not always impressed with his output. When he's good (Nudge), he's edgey, supremely confident, and worth a good deal of head-scratching. When he's bad, he can be a partisan suck-up (Radicals in Robes: Why Extreme Right-Wing Courts are Wrong for America). Most of the time, he serves up brilliant ideas, but half-baked. (Infotopia: How Many Minds Produce Knowledge).

But this is the book that Sunstein's been laying groundwork for with his last four or five. It's worth the wait. He applies the Condorcet Jury Theorem (recently popularized by Surowiecki's The Wisdom of Crowds) to constitutional jurisprudence, and he gets quite a bit of mileage out of it. This is the best "con law and economics" book since Hayek's Law, Legislation and Liberty, Volume 1: Rules and Order. And it's the single most original argument for creative progress in constitutional law in the last 50 years.

If there is a weakness, it's that he has gazed too long into the abyss of cognitive psychology, and come back with the power to mislead. Sunstein obsessively "frames" the debate with the heavy use of straw men. He invents, considers, and rejects three alternative modes of constitutional thinking he dubs "traditionalism," "populism," and "cosmopolitanism." This clever act of creative pigeonholing permits him to characterize the Scalia originalists as "populist radicals," even as he positions himself to the right of Anthony Kennedy (a latte-sipping, foreign-law-citing "cosmopolitan").

I find these faux-contrarian positions wildly, laughably implausible. I can't believe Cass has lost a moment's sleep worrying about America's constitutional sovereignty. But he seems to be suffering "loss aversion." He has chosen to ride the high horse of judicial minimalism until it dies, and then flog it some more. I think he needs new talking points, but the jury will decide...
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16 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars False premise leads to false conclusion, October 5, 2010
This review is from: A Constitution of Many Minds: Why the Founding Document Doesn't Mean What It Meant Before (Hardcover)
This was not good. First, the subtitle "Why the Founding Document Doesn't Mean What It Meant Before" suggests that Sunstein puts forth an argument against Originalism. But rather than make that argument, he simply dismisses originalism saying that it "would make the constitutional system worse" and if "taken seriously, originalism would permit race and sex discrimination by the national government, sharply limit protection of speech and allow state governments to establish official churches." This is a gross misrepresentation of the Constitution since even someone with the most basic understanding of the document knows that it was never intended to be an an infinite list of what the federal government can NOT do, but rather enumerates those few and defined powers delegated to it by the sovereign states while everything else is reserved to the states or the people. Throughout the book, Sunstein builds upon this false premise with theoretical and thinly-veiled straw man scenarios that predictably collapse under his characterization of originalism. Having dismissed originalism, Sunstein goes on to describe different variations of a living constitution, not through constitutional amendments, but through an evolution of judicial activism and precedent (traditionalism), majority rules (populism), and foreign constitutional law (cosmopolitanism).

I was also disturbed by Sunstein's misrepresentation of Thomas Jefferson's views on the constitution in the book's Introduction, Jefferson's Revenge. As if Jefferson was all for a living constitution, Sunstein misleads the reader by inaccurately portraying Jefferson as an advocate of a liberal interpretation of the constitution who favored reaching beyond its original public meaning. This simply isn't true. If anything, Jefferson was an advocate for a constitutional convention for every generation, not to expand an existing document, but to purge it of previous generations' bloated government and encroachment on individual liberty. There are scores of quotes from the man himself supporting this, but maybe the most direct and clear is in his letter to John Cartwright in 1824. "We have not yet so far perfected our constitutions as to venture to make them unchangeable. But still, in their present state, we consider them not otherwise changeable than by the authority of the people on a special election of representatives for that purpose expressly. They are until then the lex legum." This is far from advocating liberal interpretation of the constitution. And to put to rest any idea that Jefferson was anything but an originalist, look no further than this excerpt from his 1823 letter to his supreme court nominee Justice William Johnson. "On every question of construction carry ourselves back to the time when the Constitution was adopted, recollect the spirit manifested in the debates and instead of trying what meaning may be squeezed out of the text or invented against it, conform to the probable one in which it was passed."
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
jury theorem, informational cascades, common law constitutionalism, due process traditionalism, due process traditionalists, many minds argument, held public convictions, constitutional cosmopolitanism, rationalist minimalists, original public meaning, foreign legal materials, suppose that judges, aggregative view, wide rulings, juvenile death penalty, popular constitutionalism, epistemic credentials, overall harm
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Supreme Court, United States, New York, Justice Scalia, Land of the Ancients, Pledge of Allegiance, Justice Frankfurter, Harvard University Press, Oxford University Press, Warren Court, Justice Thomas, Justice Condorcet, Justice Breyer, Justice Bentham, Chief Justice Rehnquist, Princeton University Press, The Least Dangerous Branch, Second Amendment, South Africa, James Bradley Thayer, French Revolution, University of Chicago Press, Perhaps Bentham, Active Liberty, Jeremy Bentham
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