University of California, San Diego. And many professors report that student inter est in the Constitution is running higher than at any time since Watergate—when the most debated legal issue in America was what the framers meant by an impeachable offense. The revival probably has less to do with the bicentennial, however, than with the renewed controversy over the power of the Supreme Court. Attorney General Ed win Meese Ill’s call for a "jurisprudence of original intention” has given theoretical focus to public anger about court rulings in such emotion-charged areas as abortion. "The fact that President Reagan has made it clear he wants to change the interpretation on some issues makes [the Constitution] very germane now,” says constitutional scholar Peter Fish of Duke. Three main lines of constitutional study emerge: the lawyerlike, the historical and the philosophical. They are not incompati ble, but are rarely found in tandem because each embodies the methods and values of a different discipline: respectively, political science, history and political theory. Cass method: The political-science tack is the most common. Its basic materials are not so much the Constitution itself as Su preme Court applications of the Constitu tion. Students read cases, reflecting a law yerly interest in results over principle. The method’s unsentimental maxim is that of former Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes: "The Constitution is what the judges say it is.” Says Duke’s Professor Fish: "The reason political scientists focus on the Supreme Court is because t he core of political science is the search for power.” At Yale, Prof. Rogers Smith teaches a popular political-science course on consti tutional law that tries to uncover judicial motivation, wnue screening cases against their historical and intellectual context, Smith tries to show that—in constitu tional cases, at least—judges must be more than mere prod ucts of their environments or their ideological predisposi tions. "Every judge now feels and pi wavs has felt that he looks at precedent and text and feels obliged to make sense of them," he says. Still, Smith’s students are often disillusioned to learn the full extent ofjudicial discre tion. "A lot of us went in [to the course] thinking of the Consti tution as an explicit text with explicit law,” says Yale senior RosaSabater. "That the Consti tution could be so variously ap plied was disturbing. It made me wonder whether this docu ment has any meaning at all." Not one meaning but several, say historians. It depends on the era. "A lot more people than the courts have something to do with the Con stitution.” says historian Herman Belz of the University of Maryland, College Park His own seminar courses focus on "a his tory of public opinion on how to use the Constitution." Belz divides his constitu tional history into two semesters, with I860 the midpoint. Other teachers find three distinct eras: in the nation's early years the great constitutional questions concerned national supremacy over the states; the Civil War settled most of those. Then came the struggle over the federal government’s right to regulate the econ omy; the New Deal essentially ended that In recent times, public opinion and hence the courts have been concerned with weighing individual rights against the rights of govern meat Pocketbook patriots: The historical ap proach also treats the Constitution as a prcxluct of the fears of its own time Per haps the most striking example is Charles A. Beard’s muckraking 1913 work, "An Economic Interpretation of the Constitu tion.” It argued that the framers were jxx'k etbook patriots, who conceived of a strong national government as the best defense of their own property interests Beard’s book was very much a teacher’s work—a calcu lated demythologization It was widely dis puted and over the years fell into disuse on campus. However, now it is being revived, for example, in a new bicentennial course at the University of Virginia. The third approach to Const itution anal ysis is philosophical; it treats the founders as conscious theorists. The framing of the Constitution was, after all, almost as much an intellectual event as a political one. The founders were learned men, steeped in both ancient and Enlightenment tht*ories of gov ernment and society, and the debates at the Federal Convention of 1787 showed that: behind the delegates' words lay the wordsof philosophers like Machiavelli and Montes quieu. Hobbes and Locke. Montesquieu, for example, believed that because they re quired broad political participation, repub lics were only possible in small countries with limited populations. Without knowing how influential this theory was, it is diffi cult to appreciate just how innovative .James Madison was being when he argued that America needed a republican govern ment precisely because it was so large. The philosophicapproach iscomparatively rare hut is essential to any understanding of what the framers thought they were doing. Says Prof Sotirios Barber, whoteachescon stitutional interpretation at Notre Dame University. We try to study the Constitu tion as if it were a general response to hu man problems .” The Constitution is all of that and one thing more: as|>ecitie response to t he poten tial problems of a self-governing people. The framers were well aware of human f railty and yet were willing to gamble on it They knew, too, that Americans were likely to prove a diverse and difficult people That is why the Constitution repays careful st udy .For w h i le close read mg of t he (’oust i - tut ion invariably produces an awareness of the American system’s flaws—t he madden ing inefficiency of the separat ion of powers, for example—it also leads to an under standing that the Constitution is what it is because we are what we are Pktkh Met! k atii with M i< h a ki. M I i.stki n in Durham. \ (', Tracy Si v iti in .Vcic Hawn. Conn. Cindy Simt/kk mCollw Park. Sid W A Y N ►: KliTM an in Charlottrsnllr Va . and hurrau rv/xirls UNBORNI babies KILLED WERE KKKRY CAMMA I.IAISON A new focus on interpretation due to public anger: Anti-abortion rally at the Supreme Court