Page:Harvard Law Review Volume 12.djvu/463

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HARVARD


LAW REVIEW.




Vol. XII.
FEBRUARY 25, 1899.
No. 7



LAW IN SCIENCE AND SCIENCE IN LAW.[1]

By Oliver Wendell Holmes.

THE law of fashion is a law of life. The crest of the wave of human interest is always moving, and it is enough to know that the depth was greatest in respect of a certain feature or style in literature or music or painting a hundred years ago to be sure that at that point it no longer is so profound. I should draw the conclusion that artists and poets, instead of troubling themselves about the eternal, had better be satisfied if they can stir the feelings of a generation, but that is not my theme. It is more to my point to mention that what I have said about art is true within the limits of the possible in matters of the intellect. What do we mean when we talk about explaining a thing? A hundred years ago men explained any part of the universe by showing its fitness for certain ends, and demonstrating what they conceived to be its final cause according to a providential scheme. In our less theological and more scientific day, we explain an object by tracing the order and process of its growth and development from a starting point assumed as given.

This process of historical explanation has been applied to the matter of our profession, especially of recent years, with great success, and with so much eagerness, and with such a feeling that when

  1. An Address delivered by Mr. Justice Holmes before the New York State Bar Association on January 17, 1899.—Ed.

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