I want to expand a bit on yesterday's post on originalism. Public meaning is no solution to the problem of interpretive freedom. There is no reason to think that public meaning then is any narrower than public meaning now. "Cruel and unusual punishment" is an was subject to a wide range of interpretations. Similarly for provisions about due process. Moreover, public meanings are inextricable from what private meaning (or speaker's meaning, or however one labels it). However language in fact arose, it is plain enough that public and private meaning have to be interdependent (at least for the moderately sane). The theoretical shift (to public meaning) comes at least in part from the obvious historical fact that drafters did not want their personal views to govern interpretation and that such a view is inconsistent with a constitution for a republic. The meaning of texts is not a stone carving. The public meaning of the texts is intertwined with the context of interpretation, and consequent variations in understanding of the same text is not problematic. (To think otherwise commits one to intractable problems explaining how any communication occurs.) So we need to attend to the circumstances in which interpretation of the text occurs. When the Constitution is offered up as the sacrifice for legal interpretation, the circumstance matters. The presupposition of the activity is political obligation or legitimacy, and hence duties of obedience. That context makes it harder for originalist theories because they are so odd as sources of legitimacy -- the normative theory precedes the interpretive theory.
Which I think suggests something more along the lines of Balkin than either Solum or Barnett is a place to start. On Balkin and Leiter tomorrow.
It is also worth noting a couple of points which are not arguments for or against, but still salient. Originalism is an odd set of theories for law types to press -- none of those I know who advance one or another of the variants has any training as an historian. One would have expected at least some of these folk to get that training. The other is that it pays to consider the historical context of these discussions. Originalism in its current forms comes out of a particular set of political allegiances, and reactions to legal developments.
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