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textualism
[ teks-choo-uh-liz-uhm ]
noun
- strict adherence to a text, especially of the Scriptures.
- Law. the doctrine that a legal document or statute should be interpreted by determining the relatively objective ordinary meaning of its words and phrases, without regard to historical context or legislative history: originalism.
Textualism holds, that when applying the law, the words of the Constitution itself are to be the final authority.
textualism
/ ˈɛʊəˌɪə /
noun
- doctrinaire adherence to a text, esp of the Bible
- textual criticism, esp of the Bible
Derived Forms
- ˈٱٳܲ, nounadjective
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of textualism1
Example Sentences
In 2023, Alito sat for four hours of interviews for the Wall Street Journal, in a late July feature that dismissed the Alaska revelations as a “hit piece” and instead fluffed the justice as “the Supreme Court’s plain-spoken defender” and an “important justice” with a “distinctive interpretive method that is pragmatic yet rooted in originalism and textualism.”
For me, that was such a useful way to think about how factuality has been eroded by originalism, and textualism, and strict construction, or whatever the theory is, because it actually isn’t fact-based; it’s guess-based or maybe Ouija board–based or séance-based, just not based in any fact.
The society is widely seen as an instrumental force in cultivating young conservative lawyers and building a bench of future judges whose embrace of legal theories like originalism and textualism have led to decisions overturning abortion rights, environmental protections and social welfare policies.
Again, it’s in the plain language, and that’s textualism, right?
You know, there’s a difference between textualism and originalism.
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