Updated: Feb. 1, 2013, 6:56pm ET: Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, arguably the high court’s most conservative member, has again grabbed headlines for remarks made while speaking to a group of students. On Monday, Justice Scalia told students at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, “It’s not a living document. It’s dead, dead, dead.”
Scalia was responding to SMU law professor Bryan A. Garner, who has co-authored two books with Justice Scalia, their latest being Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Text. Professor Garner told the crowd that the Constitution was a “living document.”
This is an issue that constitutional experts have debated for years and years, and one historical figure that could shed some light on the issue is the nation’s first Republican president.
In his first inaugural address, Abraham Lincoln stated that the nation’s organic law could not possibly have answered our every governing question (emphasis mine):









