Robert Post (b. 1947) and Reva Siegel (b. 1956) are a married couple at Yale Law. Post was Yale Law’s dean from 2009 to 2017. Siegel is the Nicholas deB. Katzenbach Professor of Law. They have co-authored extensively, including the influential “Roe Rage: Democratic Constitutionalism and Backlash” in the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review and “Originalism as a Political Practice” in the Fordham Law Review. They co-teach “Democratic Constitutionalism” at Yale and have done so as visitors at Harvard. Post in his exit interview as dean said Harvard once tried to recruit them as a couple to start a legal-academy training program. They declined. Their joint scholarly project on democratic constitutionalism is an influential framework in American constitutional theory.
Their framework starts from a refusal. Most constitutional theory treats the Constitution as what courts say it is, with politics, social movements, and popular opinion sitting outside law as threats to its purity. Post and Siegel reject that picture. They argue constitutional law and constitutional politics depend on each other, and any account that pretends otherwise misdescribes how the American constitutional order works.
The framework rests on a tension they take as constitutive rather than embarrassing. American constitutionalism honors two commitments at once: the rule of law, which courts safeguard through professional legal reasoning, and self-governance, which means the people get to shape the meaning of their own founding document. These two commitments pull against each other. Democratic constitutionalism describes the practices through which Americans live with that pull rather than resolving it.
The core process runs like this. Citizens form views about what the Constitution requires. They mobilize around those views through movements, parties, churches, advocacy groups, and electoral politics. Government officials and courts encounter those claims, sometimes resist them, sometimes accommodate them. Over time, this back-and-forth shapes constitutional meaning. Courts give institutional form to constitutional values. Popular engagement gives those values democratic legitimacy. Each side needs the other. Strip out judicial review and you lose the rule-of-law side. Strip out popular mobilization and the Constitution becomes a closed lawyers’ guild that lacks any tether to “We the People.”
This produces their distinctive position on backlash. Popular constitutionalists like Larry Kramer (b. 1958) and Mark Tushnet (b. 1945) read the post-Roe rise of the Right as evidence that judicial review had overreached and should retreat. Minimalists like Cass Sunstein read the same history as a warning to courts to decide narrowly and avoid provoking the public. Post and Siegel say both readings miss what backlash does. Backlash is not just a cost of bold judicial rulings. It mobilizes citizens around constitutional questions, forces sustained public argument, and generates the democratic engagement that keeps constitutional law authoritative. Conflict is the normal condition for constitutional development, not a pathology to be avoided. They argue this in Roe Rage, where they treat the conservative movement against Roe as a textbook instance of democratic constitutionalism functioning as it should, even though they disagreed with the substantive position.
The originalism essay extends the same analytic. Originalism presents itself as a neutral interpretive method that constrains judges to fixed historical meanings. Post and Siegel read it as something else: a mobilizing constitutional vision that conservative movements built politics around, and that judges then enacted. The Right practiced living constitutionalism while denouncing it. Originalism is therefore not a theory standing outside democratic constitutionalism. It is an instance of it. The framework explains the rise of originalism better than originalism explains itself.
A few sharper distinctions help locate the position. Against Kramer and Tushnet, Post and Siegel keep judicial review. Courts matter and their work is not reducible to a transcription of popular will. Against originalists and against Sunstein’s minimalism, they refuse to treat popular movement as a contaminant. Against Bickel’s countermajoritarian difficulty, they deny the difficulty is the right framing. Courts are not standing outside democracy doing something hard to justify. Courts are part of how the people argue with themselves about who they are.
The framework is descriptive and normative at once. Descriptively, it claims this is how the system works whether you like it or not. Normatively, it claims this is how the system should work because it is what makes constitutional authority compatible with democratic legitimacy. The descriptive and normative claims reinforce each other. If you accept that constitutional meaning emerges from the interplay of court and movement, you cannot coherently want a system that purges movement from law. The thing you would be purifying would no longer be constitutional law in any recognizable American sense.
That is the framework in compressed form. The seminar at Yale teaches it through cases where the interplay is visible: abortion, guns, same-sex marriage, voting rights, affirmative action. The course’s pedagogical claim is that you cannot understand these decisions by reading only the opinions. You have to read the movements that shaped what counted as a credible legal argument in the first place.
How could anyone disagree?
Several lines of attack work, and they come from different directions.
The originalist objection is the cleanest. If constitutional meaning is fixed at ratification, then movements after 1787 or 1868 are noise, not signal. The job of the judge is to recover the original public meaning of the text, and the path by which a movement made certain readings politically credible has nothing to do with whether those readings are legally correct. On this view, Post and Siegel describe a sociological process that happens around courts but should not happen inside them. They have written a sociology of legal error, dressed up as a theory of legal meaning. Scalia made versions of this objection. Whittington (b. 1968) and Solum (b. 1954) make more careful versions.
The legal-process objection comes from a different angle. Hart (1904-1969) and Sacks (1920-1991), Wechsler, and the legal-process tradition argue that law gets its authority from being a distinct kind of reasoning. Judges decide by neutral principles that can be defended without reference to who wins politically. Once you tell students they cannot understand a decision without studying the movements behind it, you have collapsed law into politics. You have told them that legal craft is downstream of social power. That makes it harder to teach lawyers to argue cases on their merits, because it suggests the merits are an effect of mobilization rather than an independent thing the case turns on. The objection is not that movements have no influence. The objection is that pedagogy that foregrounds movement teaches students to be political operators rather than lawyers.
The Dworkinian objection runs parallel. Dworkin’s law-as-integrity holds that legal questions have right answers reachable through principled interpretation of the existing legal materials. The judge’s job is to find the answer that makes the legal record the best it can be. Movements may matter as context, but the standard for a good judicial decision is internal to law. Post and Siegel risk reducing the standard to whatever movement won. If the answer to “was Brown correctly decided” is “the civil rights movement made it credible,” you have given up on the idea that some answers are legally better than others.
The judicial-supremacy objection comes from people like Larry Alexander (b. 1943) and Frederick Schauer (1946-2024). Constitutional government depends on someone having the final word. If movements share authority with courts, you have a system where every constitutional question is permanently up for grabs, which means rule of law collapses into ongoing political struggle. You need a settlement function, and judicial review provides it. Democratic constitutionalism describes a system that cannot stably exist because it never settles anything.
The popular-constitutionalist objection from the left is the mirror image. Kramer and Tushnet would say Post and Siegel keep too much court. If popular mobilization is constitutive of constitutional meaning, why preserve a robust judicial veto? The framework hedges. It tries to honor both court and movement, and ends up giving courts more authority than the democratic side of its name justifies. Tushnet wants to take the Constitution away from the courts. Post and Siegel want to share it. Tushnet thinks they are not radical enough.
The pedagogical objection is practical. Law students have three years and a bar exam. Teaching them to read movements alongside opinions doubles the reading and produces lawyers who write briefs full of social history rather than doctrine. Judges read briefs, not movement studies. A first-year course on constitutional law has to teach students to argue inside the form judges accept. The movement-and-opinion approach may produce more sophisticated thinkers and worse advocates. This is the objection many practitioners make to Yale-style legal education in general, and it sharpens against this particular course.
The empirical objection is harder for them to answer. The framework predicts that backlash is generative and that the system metabolizes conflict productively. The post-Dobbs landscape is a test case. If the framework is right, the conflict over abortion should be producing a richer, more legitimate constitutional settlement through ongoing democratic engagement. Critics point to a country that looks polarized rather than productively engaged, with state-level fragmentation rather than convergence. The optimistic functionalism of the framework runs into harder evidence the longer Dobbs sits.
The selection-bias objection is sharper still. Post and Siegel build the framework on cases where movement and court eventually converged: abortion (Roe), same-sex marriage (Obergefell), gun rights (Heller). They tell stories about productive interaction. But the framework needs to explain cases where movement and court diverge for decades or where backlash produces no settlement. It needs to explain why some movements succeed and others fail. The descriptive claim that constitutional meaning emerges from court-movement interplay is true at a level of generality that explains everything and therefore predicts little.
The hardest objection comes from a thinker like Vermeule, from the right, or from a critical legal scholar from the left. Both would say the framework is a Yale-liberal theory of how Yale liberals would like the system to work. It naturalizes the post-Warren Court settlement by describing it as the organic product of court-movement interplay rather than a particular ideological victory. The framework’s own social location is invisible to it. It treats the constitutional order it grew up inside as the normal case. A more honest theory would say: here is how our coalition produces constitutional meaning, and here is why we want to keep producing it this way. The framework as written presents a partisan project as a neutral description.
These objections are not equally strong. The originalist one bites only if you accept fixed meaning. The pedagogical one is real but cuts against most law-school theorizing, not just this one. The selection-bias and post-Dobbs objections are the ones that would land hardest in a serious review.
To say you cannot understand a decision without reading the movement behind it is to take a side in a long argument about what law is. People who think law is craft, internal reasoning, or fixed meaning will all object, and they have grounds.
In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:
My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.
If Mearsheimer is right, the Post-Siegel framework keeps its descriptive surface and loses its normative core.
Start with what survives. Post and Siegel are correct that constitutional meaning emerges from the interplay of courts and popular mobilization. Movements shape what counts as a credible legal argument. Courts respond to and resist popular claims. Opinions cannot be read in isolation from the social field that produced them. None of that depends on a particular anthropology of the citizen. The descriptive claim holds whether humans are autonomous reasoners or tribal animals. Movements happen either way. Courts respond either way.
What collapses is the normative payoff. The framework’s claim to legitimacy rests on a picture of citizens forming constitutional views, mobilizing on the basis of those views, and engaging courts in a long argument about constitutional meaning. The legitimacy comes from the engagement. The engagement is supposed to be the people reasoning together about who they are. If Mearsheimer is right, the picture is wrong at every step.
Citizens do not form constitutional views and then mobilize. They are born into coalitions whose constitutional commitments are imposed on them before they can think. By the time their reasoning faculties mature, the conclusions are settled. Reason then defends commitments already in place. The Federalist Society does not produce originalists through argument. It offers a coalition home for people whose tribal location predisposes them to a certain set of conclusions, and originalism becomes the in-group vocabulary. The same is true on the other side. The ACS and Yale Law produce democratic constitutionalists in the same way. The vocabulary differs. The structure does not.
This destroys the dialogue framing. Post and Siegel describe constitutional politics as an ongoing argument between citizens and courts in which both sides give reasons and adjust. Mearsheimer’s anthropology says there are no citizens in that sense. There are coalitions deploying constitutional vocabulary to advance positions their tribal commitments produced. The “argument” is ritualized combat between groups. The court’s role is not to engage the people’s reasoning. It is to ratify whichever coalition has accumulated enough institutional and electoral power to command ratification.
Backlash looks different too. Post and Siegel treat backlash as generative. Conflict mobilizes citizens, forces argument, sustains constitutional engagement, produces democratic solidarity. Mearsheimer’s view turns this into trench warfare. The pro-life movement was not in dialogue with the Burger Court. It was a coalition mobilizing against an enemy coalition. The Court was the contested terrain, not the dialogue partner. Calling this conflict “engagement” dignifies it. What looks like productive disagreement is two tribes trying to defeat each other through whatever institutional levers each can reach. The system metabolizes the conflict only as long as both tribes accept that losing is survivable. Once that breaks, backlash becomes secession or rupture. Post-Dobbs America is testing the limits.
The buffered self assumption inside the framework is the deepest casualty. Post and Siegel write as if citizens have constitutional convictions they could defend if asked. Mearsheimer says most people have tribal commitments they rationalize as constitutional convictions when asked. The convictions track the coalition. The reasoning is post-hoc. Charles Taylor’s buffered self, the bounded individual reasoner with a stable interior life, is the figure whose presence the framework requires. If that figure is a cultural fiction produced for specific purposes by specific institutions, the framework is describing the operation of those institutions, not the operation of citizens.
Rights talk in particular looks parochial under this reading. Post and Siegel treat the language of rights as the natural idiom of constitutional argument. Movements assert rights. Courts adjudicate rights claims. The framework operates inside this vocabulary without much examining it. Mearsheimer makes the vocabulary visible as a coalition product. Rights universalism is a position held by particular coalitions in particular places at particular times. It is not what humans naturally think about how to organize political life. Most humans across most history have not thought in these terms. The framework’s neutrality with respect to rights talk is not neutral. It accepts the vocabulary of one coalition as the medium of analysis, then describes other coalitions through that vocabulary. The Federalist Society’s critique of rights inflation cannot be heard inside the framework because the framework runs on the vocabulary the Federalist Society wants to interrogate.
The framework is itself a coalition product. Post and Siegel are major figures in a coalition: Yale Law, the ACS, the post-Warren Court legal establishment, the Democratic Party’s judicial apparatus. The framework was developed inside that coalition, taught at its flagship institution, and circulated through its journals. The “we” in their writing is not abstract. It is a coalition voice. Democratic constitutionalism is the constitutional theory their coalition uses to legitimate the constitutional order their coalition built. From a Mearsheimer view, this is not a critique. It is just what theories are. Every coalition produces theories that legitimate its position. The point is that the framework’s claim to describe how constitutional orders work in general becomes a claim about how the coalition’s preferred order works when the coalition gets its way.
The originalism essay is where the tension is sharpest. Post and Siegel see clearly that originalism functioned as a mobilizing political vision that conservative coalitions built around. They write this up as evidence for their framework. The Right practiced living constitutionalism while denouncing it. Fair enough. But the same analytical move applied to their own work yields: democratic constitutionalism functions as a mobilizing political vision that liberal coalitions build around. It dignifies the constitutional politics of one side as ongoing democratic argument and the constitutional politics of the other side as a case study in mobilization. The framework cannot apply its own tools to itself without losing its normative footing. Mearsheimer makes the symmetry impossible to ignore.
Two things follow.
First, the project survives as a sociology of how constitutional law gets made. As a description of the social field around courts, it is useful. Movements matter. Coalitions shape doctrine. Opinions cannot be read in isolation. A scholar can adopt all of this and stay agnostic about whether the system is producing democratic legitimacy or just ritualizing coalition combat.
Second, the project does not survive as a normative theory of constitutional legitimacy. The legitimacy claim depends on citizens engaging the Constitution through reasoned argument and movements expressing genuine popular constitutional thought. If Mearsheimer is right, neither thing exists in the form the framework requires. What looks like legitimacy is the temporary settlement of coalition conflict. What looks like dialogue is ritual. The framework still describes the ritual accurately. It cannot dignify the ritual as something more.
The marriage point sharpens here. Post and Siegel produced this work together inside a coalition that taught them to see the constitutional order this way. The framework is a marital artifact and a coalition artifact at once. Mearsheimer would not find this surprising. He would say all theory comes from somewhere social, and the test is not whether a theory is socially produced but whether it can see its own production. Democratic constitutionalism cannot quite see its own production without losing its normative claims.
Turner says the things you need to know to participate in any practice — including the practice of constitutional argument — are mostly tacit, picked up through immersion, and not transmissible through propositional argument. This changes the analysis of Post and Siegel in ways the bare Mearsheimer reading misses.
Take their picture of citizens engaging the Constitution. The picture assumes that engagement is a matter of citizens forming views, weighing arguments, and pressing claims. Turner would say this misdescribes what is happening at the ground level. People who participate in constitutional politics participate in a practice. The practice has tacit rules about what counts as a credible claim, what counts as a real argument, what kinds of moves are legible and which are dismissed as crank. Nobody learns these rules by reading them. You learn them by hanging around long enough that they become second nature. The Federalist Society teaches its members how to argue like federalists. Yale Law teaches its students how to argue like Yale lawyers. Neither institution transmits a doctrine. Both transmit a habitus. The doctrine is downstream.
This puts pressure on the framework in a different place than Mearsheimer does. Mearsheimer attacks the anthropology. Turner attacks the epistemology. The framework rests on a model of constitutional argument as exchange of reasons. Turner says exchange of reasons is a thin top layer over a thick bed of tacit practice, and the tacit practice does most of the work. When a movement persuades a court, the persuasion is rarely about the propositional content of the argument. The movement has succeeded in making certain readings legible inside the practice that judges share. The judges then write opinions citing the propositional reasons. The reasons did not move the judges. The shift in legibility moved them. The reasons come after.
Turner’s category of convenient beliefs lands hard here. A convenient belief is one that lets a person hold a position their coalition requires without paying the social cost of explicit ideology. The belief looks like a reasoned conclusion. It functions as group membership. Post and Siegel’s framework is itself analyzable as a structure of convenient beliefs for a particular coalition. The belief that constitutional meaning emerges from democratic engagement is convenient for liberals who want to legitimate Warren Court outcomes. The belief that originalism is just one mobilization among others is convenient for liberals who want to deny that originalism has any independent claim to interpretive correctness. The beliefs are not held insincerely. They are held because they make coalition life easier. A scholar inside the coalition has no reason to question them. Questioning them costs membership.
Turner would also note something the framework cannot easily say: the framework is itself a piece of tacit pedagogy. The seminar at Yale teaches students to read constitutional decisions through the social fields that produced them. This is presented as an analytic stance. It is also a coalition formation. Students who internalize the stance become a certain kind of lawyer, fit for a certain kind of career in a certain kind of institution. They learn to see what the coalition sees and to be invisible to themselves about the seeing. This is exactly what good professional formation does. It produces people who feel like they are thinking, when what they are doing is performing the practice they have been formed into. Turner’s point is not that this is corrupt. It is that all professional formation works this way. The framework cannot describe its own pedagogy as formation without undermining its claim that what it teaches is analysis rather than initiation.
The Glacier View parallel applies. My father offered exegetical arguments inside Adventism that were correct on Adventism’s own stated terms. The institution defrocked him anyway because the propositional content was not what kept the doctrine in place. The doctrine was held by tacit commitments of the coalition that called itself Adventist, and those commitments could not be argued with, only enforced. Turner’s frameworks predict this. Propositional refutation does not move tacit practice. It triggers ejection of the refuter. Post and Siegel’s picture of constitutional engagement assumes the system metabolizes principled disagreement into legitimacy. Turner says some kinds of disagreement get metabolized. Disagreement that threatens the tacit floor gets handled by exclusion. Glacier View was an exclusion event. The Court’s treatment of certain originalist positions before the Federalist Society made them legible, and the Court’s treatment of certain progressive positions now, are exclusion events too. The framework cannot see them as exclusions because it operates inside the practice doing the excluding.
Turner’s point about the tacit also explains why the framework feels persuasive to people inside the coalition and feels evasive to people outside it. Inside, the framework names a process the reader recognizes from professional life. The reader has watched movements shift what arguments judges accept. The framework gives a vocabulary for this experience. Outside the coalition, the framework looks like a sophisticated way of describing one’s own coalition’s victories as legitimate constitutional development and the other coalition’s victories as backlash to be metabolized. Turner would say both responses are correct. The framework describes the practice accurately for those formed into it. It cannot persuade those who have not been formed into it because it speaks in the practice’s tacit register, and the tacit register is not transmissible by argument.
Institutions handle insider dissent by ritualized exclusion that they cannot acknowledge as exclusion. They have to say the dissenter was wrong on the merits, because the alternative is admitting the institution defends commitments it cannot articulate. Post and Siegel’s framework cannot easily say this about courts. The framework needs courts to be in dialogue with movements. If courts are instead defending tacit commitments that can be enforced but not articulated, the dialogue picture collapses into something colder. The Court in Dobbs did not engage the movement’s arguments. The Court accepted that the movement had succeeded in making certain readings legible and made other readings illegible. The opinions came after. Turner would say this is normal. Post and Siegel’s framework dignifies it as engagement.
Turner’s tacit frame says that the practice of constitutional argument runs on tacit rules that propositional argument cannot reach, that the framework is a piece of tacit professional formation, and that the framework cannot apply its analytic to its own production without dissolving. The framework remains useful as description. It cannot deliver the legitimacy story it was built to deliver. The legitimacy was supposed to come from citizens engaging the Constitution. What is actually happening is coalitions running their tacit practices through the institutional machinery of constitutional law. The framework names this and dignifies it. Turner makes it impossible to do both.
Post and Siegel’s marriage matters for Turner’s frames in a way it does not for Mearsheimer. Turner cares about the social conditions of intellectual production because the tacit knowledge gets transmitted through proximity, conversation, shared reading, and joint practice. A framework developed inside a marriage is a framework whose tacit foundations were laid in years of conversation between two people who shared a coalition and a household. The framework is dense with shared assumptions because the assumptions never had to be made explicit. The two authors did not have to argue them out. They lived them. This is what makes the framework feel coherent and inevitable from the inside, and it is also what makes the framework difficult to translate to readers who do not share the marital and coalition formation that produced it.
Turner does not deny that legitimacy exists. People accept some institutions and reject others. Legitimacy lives in tacit practice, in habits of deference, in the felt sense among participants that this is how things are done. Theories that claim to ground legitimacy in reason, consent, deliberation, or democratic engagement are doing something other than what they say they are doing. They are articulating, in propositional form, commitments the articulator already holds for non-propositional reasons.
Compare constitutional norms to a theory of why a particular language is grammatical. Native speakers know what counts as grammatical without being able to say why. A linguist can write a grammar that makes the rules explicit. The grammar describes the practice. It does not legitimate the practice. A French speaker does not need a theory of French grammar to speak French. A constitutional order does not need a theory of constitutional legitimacy to be legitimate. It needs people who tacitly accept its operations as authoritative. When the tacit acceptance fails, no theory can repair it. When the tacit acceptance holds, no theory is needed.
Turner would say constitutional theory is a misdescription of where legitimacy lives. It lives in practice. Theory is parasitic on practice. A theorist can describe the practice well or poorly, but the description is not what makes the practice legitimate. Hume’s gap between is and ought remains, and theories that try to leap it by sophistication rather than honest acknowledgment of where they actually stand are doing something Turner would call a category error.
So a Turner answer to “is there a valid normative theory of constitutional legitimacy” looks like this: There can be valid descriptions of how a constitutional order produces and sustains the tacit acceptance that constitutes its legitimacy. Such descriptions are sociological. They explain how courts, schools, professions, families, churches, media, and political institutions form citizens whose acceptance keeps the order running.
There can be normative arguments inside a constitutional tradition. A judge can argue that one reading of the Fourteenth Amendment is better than another by the standards the legal practice already accepts. A scholar can argue that a particular doctrine fits the tradition better than alternatives. These arguments are intelligible because they happen inside a practice whose ground rules are tacitly shared. They are not building legitimacy from scratch. They are working inside an already-legitimate practice and adjusting its surface.
There cannot be a normative theory that grounds the legitimacy of the practice itself in something external to the practice. Such theories are always either restating the practice’s tacit commitments in propositional form, or importing tacit commitments from another practice and presenting them as universal reason. Rawls does the second. Post and Siegel do the first. Both are intelligible as moves inside their own tradition. Neither delivers what the genre of normative theory promises.
This is why Turner is closer to a tragic position than a cheerful relativism. The thing legitimacy theorists are trying to do cannot be done. The cannot is structural, not contingent. It will not be fixed by a better theory. The legitimacy of a constitutional order rests on the tacit formation of its citizens, and the tacit formation cannot be argued for from outside the formation. You can describe it. You can participate in it. You can lose it, in which case the order falls apart and no argument will save it. You cannot build it on argument.
A subtler point Turner would press: the demand for a normative theory of constitutional legitimacy is a feature of a particular tradition, the post-Enlightenment liberal tradition that needs to legitimate its institutions to itself in propositional terms because it has lost the tacit forms that earlier orders relied on. Older constitutional orders did not feel the need. They had divine right, ancestral custom, religious sanction, tribal belonging. These were not theories. They were practices of legitimacy. The modern liberal order replaced them with what it presents as universal reason and discovered that universal reason cannot do the work the older practices did. So it produces theory after theory trying to fill the gap. The theories proliferate because none of them works. Each new generation of legitimacy theorists writes fresh books because the previous generation’s books did not deliver what they promised. Post and Siegel are the latest entry in this pattern. So is Habermas. So is Rawls. So is Dworkin. The proliferation is itself a symptom Turner can read.
What this leaves you with: a constitutional order is legitimate to the extent that the people who participate in it accept its operations as authoritative without needing to be argued into the acceptance. When the acceptance erodes, no normative theory will rebuild it. When the acceptance holds, normative theory describes its surface. The American constitutional order is currently watching its tacit acceptance erode along coalition lines. Post and Siegel’s framework cannot fix this. Vermeule’s common-good constitutionalism cannot fix it either. The fix, if there is one, comes from formation, not from theory. Theories are obituaries or birth announcements for tacit orders. They are not the orders themselves.
Turner effectively says the genre of normative theory of constitutional legitimacy is asking for something the world does not provide. You can have descriptions of legitimate practice. You can have argument inside a practice. You cannot have a theory that grounds the practice from outside. The thing the genre promises is not available. Theorists who keep writing as if it is are either not noticing this, or noticing and proceeding anyway because the genre has its own coalition function regardless of whether it delivers.
Both Torah and the Constitution are foundational texts treated as authoritative by communities organized around them. Both generate centuries of interpretive practice. Both raise the same recurring question: how do you stay faithful to a text whose original setting is gone while keeping the text alive for present circumstances? The answers cluster in similar ways across both traditions.
Start with the originalist family. In constitutional law, originalism holds that the meaning fixed at ratification controls. Judges should recover that meaning and apply it. The Torah parallel is the Karaite position. The Karaites rejected rabbinic tradition and held that Scripture alone binds. What the text says, plainly read in its historical context, is what the law requires. No oral elaboration, no rabbinic gloss, no centuries of accumulated interpretation. Just the text. The Karaites lost the long argument inside Judaism and survive today as a small remnant, but their position has the same structural shape as constitutional originalism. Both treat the founding text as a closed system whose meaning was set at the moment of revelation or ratification. Both treat later interpretive accretion as a deviation rather than a development. Both are revisionist in the sense that they want to clear away what came after to recover what came at the beginning.
The mainstream rabbinic position differs from this in ways that map closely onto living constitutionalism. The rabbis treated the Written Torah as inseparable from the Oral Torah given alongside it at Sinai. The two together constitute the Torah. Interpretation is not optional. Interpretation is constitutive. The rabbinic mesorah is the chain of transmission through which the meaning of the text reaches each generation. Without the chain, you do not have Torah. You have a book. This is structurally what Bruce Ackerman, Jack Balkin, and the living-constitutionalist tradition argue about the Constitution. The text without the tradition of interpretation is not a working constitution. The interpretation is part of the law, not a contamination of it. Balkin’s living originalism, which tries to reconcile fidelity to text with the necessity of ongoing interpretation, has rabbinic structure whether or not Balkin would put it that way. He happens to be Jewish and writes about this directly.
Post and Siegel’s democratic constitutionalism has its own rabbinic shadow. The framework holds that constitutional meaning emerges through ongoing dialogue between authoritative interpreters and the community they serve, with both sides contributing to what the text comes to mean. This is recognizably how the Talmud works. The Talmud is a record of disagreement that reaches no final settlement on most questions and that treats the disagreement as itself constitutive of Torah. “These and those are the words of the living God” applies. The Mishnah preserves the minority view alongside the majority because the minority view might become the law in some future case. The court interprets, the community responds, the interpretation gets adjusted, the next generation reopens the question. This is the picture Post and Siegel describe in constitutional terms. The major difference is that the rabbinic tradition has a stronger sense that the dialogue is internal to the practice, while Post and Siegel try to keep some role for popular voices outside the professional class. The Talmud is a conversation among rabbis. Democratic constitutionalism wants the conversation to include citizens too.
The popular constitutionalists go further in this direction, and their nearest Jewish parallel is Hasidism. Larry Kramer and Mark Tushnet want to take the Constitution back from the courts and return it to the people. The professional class has hijacked something that should belong to everyone. Hasidism in its origins was something like this. The Baal Shem Tov and his followers argued that pious feeling and direct relationship with God belonged to the simple Jew as much as to the lamdan. The scholar’s monopoly on religious authority was a usurpation. The community should not need a class of professionals to mediate between it and the divine. This is the same argumentative shape as popular constitutionalism. Both are populist movements within an interpretive tradition that wrest authority from a professional elite and redistribute it to the broader community. Both are accused by the elite of degrading the tradition. Both eventually generate their own elites and their own professional classes, but the original move has the same structure.
The ultra-traditional position in halakha has a constitutional parallel that is harder to place. Daas Torah, the doctrine that the great rabbis of each generation have authoritative judgment on matters extending well beyond strict legal questions, holds that the chain of tradition is so dense and the formation of those inside it so deep that their pronouncements deserve deference even on questions where the formal sources do not give a clear answer. The closest constitutional parallel is something like the older notion of judicial supremacy paired with a strong sense of the Court as an institution whose pronouncements warrant deference because of who issues them. But this is a weak match. American constitutional culture has never produced anything quite like Daas Torah because American legal culture lacks the personal authority structures that produce such figures. The Federalist Society has tried to build something like a tradition with elders, but the constitutional system was not designed to elevate persons in this way and the parallel breaks down.
The Modern Orthodox position, particularly as developed by Joseph Soloveitchik, maps onto a more interesting place in constitutional thought. Soloveitchik treated halakha as a self-contained interpretive system with its own internal logic, accessible only to those formed in its categories, and not reducible to the historical conditions that produced it. The halakhic man encounters reality through halakhic categories. Outside observers can describe the system but cannot understand it from within unless they undergo the formation. This is structurally close to the legal-process tradition in American law. Hart and Sacks, Wechsler, and the legal-process school treated law as a distinct mode of reasoning with its own internal standards, accessible only through formation in the practice. Reasoned elaboration, neutral principles, the institutional competence of different legal actors. These were not arguments about substance. They were arguments about the form of legal thought, and the form was held to be irreducible. Soloveitchik would have understood the move. Both positions resist external reduction of an interpretive practice to its historical or political conditions. Both insist that the practice has integrity that the outsider cannot grasp.
Vermeule’s common-good constitutionalism has no clean Jewish parallel because it is itself a Catholic project that draws on natural law traditions Judaism does not share in the same way. But the structural move Vermeule makes, which is to subordinate procedural and originalist considerations to a substantive vision of the good that the legal order should promote, has a faint echo in the position of Jewish thinkers who held that halakha must be read in light of its underlying purposes and that purpose can override formal letter when the two diverge. The Hatam Sofer’s famous “chadash assur min haTorah” runs the other way. He held that any innovation is forbidden by the Torah itself, which is closer to a kind of fixed-meaning textualism with strong tradition. Reform Judaism’s early ethical-monotheism reading, which downplayed ritual law in favor of moral principles supposed to be the Torah’s true content, has the structural shape of Vermeule’s move. The Constitution or the Torah is treated as serving a substantive vision, and the legal materials are read in light of that vision. Reform took this far enough to dissolve much of the tradition. Vermeule wants the structural move without the dissolution. Both moves face the same problem. Once the substantive vision controls, the text becomes infinitely flexible in the direction of the vision, and fidelity to text becomes hard to distinguish from imposition of the interpreter’s preferences.
The deepest mapping concerns the role of the community. American constitutional thought has always struggled with the question of who “the people” are in “We the People.” Are they the ratifiers of 1787, the citizens of the present moment, the polity over time, the descendants of the founders, the demos including immigrants and the marginalized? Different answers produce different constitutional theories. Judaism has the same problem in a different vocabulary. Who is the bearer of the mesorah? Is it Klal Yisrael, the Jewish people as a whole? Is it the rabbinic chain narrowly construed? Is it the formed community of those who keep mitzvot? Is it the nation in some ethnic sense? Different answers produce different theories of halakhic authority and continuity. Both traditions have arguments about whether the bearer of the tradition can include those who reject parts of it and still count as inside, or whether rejection of certain core elements removes one from the community whose interpretive consensus matters.
The convert occupies a similar position in both traditions. The Jewish convert undergoes formation that is supposed to make him as Jewish as the born Jew, including for purposes of interpretive authority. The naturalized American citizen undergoes a thinner version of the same kind of induction. Both raise the question of whether formation can substitute for inheritance, and both traditions answer yes in principle while being uneasy about it in practice.
A few places where the mapping breaks down or where the comparison teaches something specific.
The Constitution can be amended by clear procedure. The Torah cannot. Halakha can change through interpretation, takkanot, gezerot, and the gradual accumulation of practice, but it has no Article V. This makes the rabbinic interpretive tradition do work that constitutional amendment can do in the American system. Some changes that would happen by amendment in America happen by interpretation in halakha, and the interpretive moves are more strained as a result. Reform Judaism’s solution was to act as if the equivalent of an Article V amendment had happened by communal acclamation, which the Orthodox treated as exit from the tradition rather than amendment within it.
The Constitution has a dominant institutional interpreter in the Supreme Court. The Torah does not have a comparable single institution. The Sanhedrin in its time may have functioned this way. After its dissolution, halakhic authority diffused into the rabbinate without ever reconcentrating. The result is a tradition with multiple authoritative voices that disagree, where the constitutional system has one authoritative voice that, since Marbury, has claimed final say. This makes American constitutional theory more focused on the courts than rabbinic theory is on any single body. Post and Siegel’s framework, which tries to share authority between courts and movements, is moving toward something more like the rabbinic structure without saying so.
The Constitution is national. The Torah is for Klal Yisrael across the diaspora. This gives halakhic interpretation a transnational character that constitutional interpretation lacks. Halakhic authorities in Vilna, Cairo, Baghdad, Mainz, and Jerusalem all participated in the same conversation across centuries. The American constitutional conversation is bounded by territory and citizenship. The two traditions therefore differ in how they handle the question of authoritative dispersion, with halakha doing it natively and constitutional law treating it as a problem.
The deepest analogy is one neither tradition often acknowledges. Both depend on the formation of the interpreter. A constitutional theorist who has not been through American legal education cannot make moves inside the practice that the practice will accept. A posek who has not been through yeshiva cannot make moves the rabbinic community will accept. The formation is tacit, prolonged, and largely propositional only on the surface. Underneath the propositional content runs the deeper layer of habits, intuitions, sensibilities, and taste that the formation actually transmits. This is where Turner’s analysis fits both traditions equally well. The legitimacy of an interpretive move comes from its acceptance by the formed community. The acceptance is not produced by argument alone. The argument has to land inside ears that have been trained to hear it. Both the lawyer and the rabbi work in this medium. Both traditions produce theories of legitimacy that try to make the medium look more propositional than it is. Both traditions produce occasional figures who see through the theories and describe the medium honestly. These figures are usually awkward inside their traditions and often suspected of disloyalty. Their honesty is what gives the suspicion its edge.
If Mearsheimer is right above, the framing of Torah and mesorah as a tradition of reasoned engagement with revelation has to give way to something colder. The descriptive surface survives. The legitimacy story changes.
Start with what survives. Jews encounter Torah. They study, argue, decide. The chain of transmission runs from teacher to student across centuries. Halakhic decisions get made. Communities form around shared practice. None of this requires a particular anthropology of the learner. Whether the learner is an autonomous reasoner engaging eternal truths or a tribal animal embedded in a coalition that shapes him before he can think, the transmission happens. The Mishnah and Gemara still exist. The poskim still rule. The communities still keep their practices.
What changes is the picture of why the tradition holds. The traditional self-understanding presents Torah as truth and the Jewish people as the community formed by encountering that truth. The community is the consequence of the encounter. The encounter is primary. Sinai is a moment when the people stood and said na’aseh v’nishma, we will do and we will hear, and from that moment the people are constituted as the bearer of revelation. The order is theological. The truth comes first. The community follows.
Mearsheimer reverses this. Humans are tribal before they are anything else. They are born into communities that form them long before they can assess what they are being formed into. By the time the formed person encounters Torah, his categories of encounter have already been shaped by the community whose Torah it is. He does not stand at Sinai as an autonomous individual deciding whether to accept revelation. He stands inside a people whose identity is bound to that revelation and whose pressure to receive it is total. The reception is overdetermined. The will to receive is the community’s will operating through him. The truth-status of the content is not what produces the acceptance. The acceptance produces the felt truth-status.
This is hard for the tradition to absorb because the tradition treats the community as the consequence of revelation rather than its precondition. Mearsheimer says the precondition came first. The community of the proto-Israelites existed before any Sinai event. They had a tribal identity, a coalition structure, an in-group sense of who counted as one of them and who did not. The receiving of Torah, whatever historically happened, was an event inside that pre-existing community. The Torah took its character from what the community was already prepared to receive. The community took its character from what the Torah did to consolidate it. The two co-produced each other. There is no clean causal arrow from heaven to people.
The mesorah looks different under this analysis. The traditional picture treats the chain of transmission as the channel through which truth flows from generation to generation. Each link in the chain receives what was given and passes it on, with the chain’s reliability secured by the dedication of those who keep it. The chain is supposed to track truth across time. Mearsheimer’s anthropology says the chain tracks the community across time. What is transmitted is not propositional truth verified at each step. What is transmitted is the formation that makes a person into a member of this people. The propositional content of Torah and Talmud is one part of the formation, but a smaller part than the tradition acknowledges. The bigger part is the habits, sensibilities, food, language, gestures, family structure, tribal markers, and embodied practices that constitute Jewish life. A child who learns the propositions but does not absorb the rest is not really inside. A child who absorbs the rest but cannot recite the propositions is closer to inside than the first. The chain is a coalition reproduction system, and the propositions are coalition tokens.
The Karaite challenge looks different too. The Karaites argued that Scripture alone binds and that rabbinic tradition is a human accretion. The rabbinic response was that Scripture without tradition is not Torah, that the Oral Law was given alongside the Written, and that the chain of tradition is itself authoritative. Mearsheimer’s analysis says the rabbinic response is correct as description but wrong about why it is correct. Scripture without tradition is not Torah because there is no such thing as Scripture without tradition. The text exists only inside a community that reads it in particular ways. The Karaite project was an attempt to escape the community while keeping the text. This was incoherent because the text was never a free-standing object available for community-free reading. Karaites who tried to do this developed their own tradition, their own community, their own coalition, which then read the text in the ways their coalition produced. They could not do what they said they were doing. The rabbis won the argument because their position described the actual situation. They did not win because their theological account of why the tradition binds was correct.
The same applies to constitutional originalism, on the parallel mapping. Originalists claim to read the text without the accretion of later interpretive tradition. They cannot actually do this, for the same reason Karaites could not. The text exists only inside a reading community. Originalism is the reading practice of a particular reading community. The claim to escape interpretation while reading is the kind of move Mearsheimer’s anthropology predicts will fail wherever it is attempted. Coalitions cannot read texts coalition-free.
The question of authority within the tradition shifts. The traditional picture treats the great halakhic authorities as transmitters of truth whose pronouncements warrant deference because of the chain they stand in and the dedication of their lives to learning. Mearsheimer’s analysis says the great authorities are the figures whose formation is densest, whose capacity to embody the coalition’s self-understanding is highest, and whose pronouncements are accepted because the community recognizes its own deepest tendencies in them. Their authority is real but not because they are tracking eternal truths. They are giving voice to what the coalition already knows about itself in tacit form. The Hazon Ish, the Hatam Sofer, the Gra. Their authority comes from the perfection of their formation in the tradition’s tacit content, not from any external truth-tracking they perform. The tradition feels authoritative through them because they are dense crystallizations of the tradition itself.
This explains why halakhic decision feels so different from logical inference. A posek does not deduce the law from premises and rules. He sees the case and the answer comes. The articulation comes after, and the articulation is often unable to fully reconstruct what the posek actually did. The tradition has names for this. Daas Torah is one. Sevara is another. The tradition acknowledges that the formed authority sees something that the unformed cannot reach by argument. Mearsheimer’s analysis would say the formed authority is reading the case through coalition categories so deeply absorbed that they operate automatically. The case looks one way to him because he is one of these people in the deepest possible sense. To someone outside the formation, the case might look another way, and there is no neutral ground from which to adjudicate between them.
The convert’s position becomes clearer. Conversion in the traditional understanding is theological. The convert undergoes spiritual transformation and becomes a Jew with a Jewish soul. Mearsheimer’s analysis says conversion is coalition transfer. The convert leaves one coalition and enters another. The transfer is social, behavioral, and psychological. It requires absorbing the new coalition’s tacit formation thoroughly enough that the new coalition recognizes him as one of its own. This is why conversion takes so long when done seriously. The propositional content of the religion can be taught in months. The tacit formation requires years of immersion. The hardest part was becoming someone who feels Jewish, eats Jewish, gestures Jewish, thinks Jewish, fears the Jewish things and treasures the Jewish things. The rabbinic court at the end is testing whether the formation has taken. They cannot see your soul. They can see whether you have become one of these people in the way the community recognizes its own.
The diaspora character of the tradition takes on a different cast. The traditional picture sees the dispersion of Jewish communities across many lands as a complicated theological problem, related to exile, divine punishment, and the deferred messianic ingathering. The communities maintained the tradition under difficult conditions because the tradition is true and they were faithful to it. Mearsheimer’s analysis says the communities maintained the tradition because they were extremely effective coalitions that solved the problem of intergenerational transmission under hostile conditions through dense in-group formation, strict boundary maintenance, and ruthless treatment of those who tried to leave or who threatened the tacit floor. The hostility from outside reinforced the boundary. The boundary preserved the formation. The formation preserved the community. The theology made sense of all this in terms the community could affirm. Strip away the theology and the coalition mechanics are visible.
The treatment of internal dissent confirms the analysis. The tradition has handled threats to its tacit floor through ritualized exclusion across all its phases. The Sadducees, the Karaites, the Sabbateans, the Frankists, the Maskilim, the early Reformers, Spinoza. Each was a movement of insiders whose challenge to the tradition’s tacit content the tradition could not absorb. Each was excluded. The exclusions were not always handled the same way. The propositional reasons given were various. The structural fact is the same. Coalitions defend their tacit floors by ejecting insiders who threaten them. Mearsheimer’s anthropology predicts this. Turner’s analysis explains why the propositional reasons given for the exclusions are usually post-hoc and often unconvincing on their own terms. The reasons did not produce the exclusions. The exclusions came from coalition self-defense. The reasons were generated to legitimate the exclusions inside the coalition’s vocabulary.
Spinoza’s case is the sharpest. The Amsterdam community excommunicated him in language of fierce religious denunciation. The propositional content of his philosophy could have been answered, refuted, or argued with. The community did not do this. It expelled him. Why? Because his philosophy threatened the tacit floor on which the community stood. Once you read scripture as a human document produced by particular people in particular places, the community’s claim to a privileged relationship with revelation evaporates. The community could not let this stand and remain itself. So Spinoza had to go. The cherem language is not a philosophical refutation. It is a coalition act of self-preservation. Mearsheimer would recognize this immediately. So would Turner. The tradition’s own self-understanding cannot quite see what happened, because the self-understanding is what the act was protecting.
The tradition can acknowledge that humans are social, that formation matters, that community shapes the individual, that mitzvot work on the person to make him into something he could not become alone. All of this is inside traditional Jewish self-understanding. What the tradition cannot easily acknowledge is that the formation precedes the encounter with truth and produces what feels like the encounter. To acknowledge this is to relativize the truth claim that the tradition rests on. The tradition holds that Torah is true, that the Jewish people are formed by encountering truth, and that the formation is a response to something real outside the community. Mearsheimer’s anthropology says the formation produces the felt reality of the truth, with the historical truth-question separable from the felt truth-question and largely inaccessible to those inside the formation.
A serious traditionalist can accept the priority of community over revelation. To accept that priority is to undo the theological frame. Most traditionalists do not face this question because they do not encounter Mearsheimer’s anthropology in a form that presses it on them. Those who do encounter it tend to either reject it as a secular intrusion or to internalize it quietly while keeping their public observance. A small number have written carefully about the tension and tried to hold both. Yeshayahu Leibowitz is one example, though he came from a different angle and held the tension by emphasizing that the value of mitzvot lies in their being commanded rather than in any historical or metaphysical claim about the commander’s existence. This is a defensive move that keeps the practice while bracketing the question. It works for those who can sustain it. Most cannot.
Mearsheimer’s frame is an account of how humans normally form, decide, and act. It is not a metaphysical theory that closes the door on events outside ordinary social process. A coherent traditionalist position holds both: humans are social and tribal as Mearsheimer describes, and Sinai was an event of a different kind that breaks into the social process from outside it.
The move is structurally available and theologically respectable. It looks something like this.
The Mearsheimer description applies to the ordinary running of human life. People are born into communities, formed by them, shaped before they can think. Their values, attachments, and felt truths come from socialization more than from reasoning. This is how humans work most of the time. Revelation is not a normal social event. Revelation is the moment when the Creator of the human creature speaks to that creature directly, and the speaking does something that the ordinary mechanics of social formation cannot produce. Sinai is presented in the tradition as exactly this kind of event. The whole people stood at the mountain. The voice was heard by all of them at once. The event was not mediated through the usual social channels because the usual social channels could not have produced it. Whatever the people were before Sinai, they were something different after Sinai, because something had entered their history that was not from their history.
Inside this frame, the Mearsheimer description is correct about what happens between revelations and during the long stretches when no revelation is occurring. Humans during those stretches form coalitions, transmit cultures, defend tacit floors, do all the things he describes. But Sinai is the exception that founds everything else. The community is shaped by it rather than producing it. The Torah is not a coalition product because the coalition was made by it rather than the reverse. The mesorah is the chain of transmission of something that came from outside the social process and entered it at one point. The transmission inside the chain works the way Mearsheimer would describe any transmission, but the content being transmitted is of different origin.
This position says Mearsheimer is right about everything he is competent to be right about, which is the social science of human action. He is not making a metaphysical claim that revelation cannot have occurred, and if he were, that claim would be outside his competence. The question of whether Sinai happened is a theological question, not a sociological one. The sociologist can describe how communities behave around their founding events. He cannot tell you whether the founding events happened. The traditionalist who accepts Mearsheimer’s anthropology for ordinary life and affirms revelation as the exception is not contradicting himself. He is locating the two claims in the domains where each belongs.
This is the structure of Aquinas’s response to Aristotle. It is in different form what Maimonides does with Aristotelian science. The natural philosophers describe how things normally work. Revelation is the exceptional event whose reality is established through its own kind of evidence, which is the testimony of those who received it and the historical existence of the community that bears witness to having received it. The natural account does not refute the revelational account because the natural account is not making the kind of claim that could refute it. They are commensurable.
The traditionalist has a basis for treating Sinai as established and not merely as a coalition myth he happens to find congenial. His lived experience of Torah might convince him of its divine origin.
A second move strengthens the position. The traditionalist can acknowledge that the felt experience of being inside the tradition is exactly what Mearsheimer’s anthropology predicts. He feels the tradition as true because he was formed inside it. The formation produces the felt truth. He does not deny this. He says further that the formation is itself appropriate, because it transmits a content whose origin is outside the formation. The formation is doing what formation does, but the thing it is forming people into is not just another coalition. It is the bearer of revelation. From inside the formation, the formed person cannot fully separate the felt truth produced by the formation from the truth-status of the content produced by Sinai. That is fine. He is not in a position to make such separations and does not need to be. His confidence in the content rests partly on his own formed sense of it and partly on his trust in the chain of testimony that runs back to the founding event. The two reinforce each other. The formation makes him receptive. The testimony grounds the receptivity in something more than coalition self-confirmation.
A third move handles the awkward cases. Why have other coalitions also produced strong felt convictions of truth? Why does the Christian feel Christianity, the Muslim feel Islam, the Hindu feel his tradition? If Sinai is unique and the formation around it carries genuine revelation, what about the formations around Mecca, Calvary, the Vedas? The traditionalist has answers but they are not easy and the answers come in different versions. Some traditions hold that other religions contain partial truths reflecting the universal human capacity to glimpse the divine. Some hold that Sinai’s uniqueness is precisely uniqueness and that other religions, however sincere, are responding to something different and not to the same kind of event. Some hold that the seven Noahide laws given to all humanity represent the universal divine address while Sinai represents the particular covenant. Each of these positions has its own difficulties and each has been defended by serious thinkers. The point is that the existence of other felt-true coalitions does not by itself refute the uniqueness of Sinai any more than the existence of forged paintings refutes the existence of authentic ones. The question is not whether forgery is possible. It is whether the original is real and whether the criteria for distinguishing original from forgery are available.
A fourth move addresses the tacit-formation problem directly. Turner’s analysis says that propositional content rides on top of tacit formation and that the tacit formation does most of the work. The traditionalist accepts this and adds something. The tacit formation in the Jewish case has been transmitted through more than three thousand years across hostile conditions that should have destroyed it many times over and did not. This is not just a coalition feat. It is unusual enough to bear interpretation. The traditionalist reads the survival of the tradition as itself evidence that something more than ordinary coalition force has been at work. Other coalitions of comparable density have not survived comparable conditions. The Jewish coalition has, repeatedly. The traditionalist sees in this what the tradition itself sees: a divine guarantee that the bearer of the revelation will not be lost from history regardless of what happens to it. This is not proof in any strict sense. It is a pattern of historical persistence that the traditionalist reads in light of the theological claim. The reading is interpretive. The pattern is real.
Soloveitchik’s halakhic man is partly an attempt to describe how a person formed by halakha encounters reality through halakhic categories. He takes for granted that the formation is total and that the categories are not optional. He does not try to ground halakha in something prior to formation. He affirms the revelation and describes the life of someone formed by it. The Lubavitcher Rebbe, in a different register, made claims about Sinai’s reality that did not depend on naturalistic argument. He treated revelation as the founding fact and described Jewish life as a response to that fact. Heschel’s God in Search of Man tried something similar in more accessible philosophical language, arguing that the human capacity to encounter the divine is itself given, that revelation is not merely a sociological event but a real meeting, and that the tradition transmits both the content of the meeting and the formation that makes future meetings possible.
The position has a cost. The traditionalist who holds it cannot pretend that the question of revelation is open in the way the secular scholar treats it as open. He has decided. He treats the Sinai event as established and proceeds from there. The secular scholar treats the question as open in principle and finds no decisive evidence for closing it in either direction. The traditionalist has crossed a line the scholar has not crossed. He should not pretend otherwise. He should also not pretend that the line he has crossed is purely arbitrary or merely a matter of coalition formation. He has crossed it on the basis of testimony, persistence, internal coherence, lived experience, and the kind of evidence that founds religious life rather than scientific theory.
