Hans-Peter Haferkamp



Recht als System bei Georg Friedrich Puchta /
Georg Friedrich Puchta and his system of law

 

- English Summary -

To this day, Georg Friedrich Puchta, who was Savigny`s follower and, later, his successor in Berlin, is seen as the founder of the "Begriffsjurisprudenz". The present paper contradicts prejudices, which flow from this image. Focusing on a dispute about the formation of systems among Puchta and Friedrich Julius Stahl, a new picture is painted, regarding Puchta`s systematic thinking. Insights from more recent research on F. W. J. Schelling show that Puchta`s understanding of systems was based on ideas of Schelling rather than on those of Wolff, Kant or others. Thus, Puchta constructed a system that could be interpreted, with Schelling, as both necessary and free. It was free with regard to the origin of legal principles. For such principles did not derive from fixed concepts. Rather, concepts derived from principles. At the same time, it was necessary to connect legal principles with one another as comprehensively as possible. In this context, the academic had to find causal connections between single principles. According to both Schelling and Puchta, a systematic pattern like academic research was unthinkable without such connections. As a result, the common idea of Puchta being a "Begriffsjurist" turned out to be unsubstantiated.