The Idea of Private Law emerged out of, but went beyond, the great
controversies about tort theory that agitated legal scholarship in the
last decades of the twentieth century. The origins and aspirations of
the book are the subject of this retrospective preface.
That tort law became the site of fi erce theoretical contention is not
surprising. By its very nature tort law immediately raises an array of
pressing theoretical issues. What justifi es the law’s coercive authority to
impose obligations on persons who have not assumed them? On what
basis does tort law protect certain interests and not others? Where is the
line to be drawn between freedom of action and liability for the consequences
of action? What is the normative signifi cance of culpability? Can
tort law succeed in bringing the arbitrary misfortune of unintended
injuries under a rational juridical discipline? In tort law these questions,
interesting enough on their own, play themselves out within a subject
that has always been fundamental to legal education, so that tort theory
resonates broadly within the intellectual culture of academic lawyers.