And putting the secondary first, in the book's order of treatment, had the bad side effect of encouraging the myth (or déformation professionelle of believing) that the default position in jurisprudence or legal philosophy is legal positivism, and that anyone who upholds law's appropriate positivity is 'conceding' or 'admitting' something rightly affirmed by positivists—as if the loose cluster of positions labelled by textbooks 'positivism' were not (as it is) a latecomer to the philosophy of law, with not too many important discoveries to its name and a vast capacity and willingness to misread the philosophical tradition from which it emerged.引自 Postscript