The law persists because people have reasons to comply with its rules.
What characterizes those reasons is their interdependence: each of us
only has a reason to comply because he or she expects the others to
comply for the same reasons. The rules may help us to solve coordination
problems, but the interaction patterns regulated by them also include
Prisoner's Dilemma games, Division problems and Assurance problems. In
these "games" the rules can only persist if people can be expected to be
moved by considerations of fidelity and fairness, not only of
prudence.
This book takes a fresh look at the perennial problems of legal
philosophy - the source of obligation to obey the law, the nature of
authority, the relationship between law and morality, and the nature of
legal argument - from the perspective of this conventionalist
understanding of social rules. It argues that, since the resilience of
such rules depends on cooperative dispositions, conventionalism,
properly understood, does not imply positivism.