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Description
Natural Law Today: The Present State of the Perennial Philosophy explains and defends various aspects of traditional natural law ethical theory, which is rooted in a broad understanding of human nature. Some of the issues touched upon include the relation of natural law to speculative reason and human ends (teleology), the relationship between natural law and natural theology, the so-called naturalistic fallacy (deriving “ought” from “is”), and the scope of natural knowledge of the precepts of the natural law, as well as possible limits on it. It also takes up certain historical and contemporary questions, such as the various stances of Protestant thinkers toward natural law, the place of natural law in contemporary U.S. legal thought, and the relationship between natural law and liberal political thought more generally. It brings together a number of the leading exponents of a more traditional or classical form of natural law thought, who claim to root their arguments within the broader philosophy of Thomas Aquinas more deeply than other major representatives of the natural law tradition today.
Table of Contents
Steven A. Long, Ave Maria University
Chapter Two: Natural Inclinations in Aquinas’s Account of Natural Law
Michael Pakaluk, The Catholic University of America
Chapter Three: Natural Law and Natural Right(s): Conceptual and Terminological Clarifications
Fulvio Di Blasi, Thomas International Center
Chapter Four: “The Same as to Knowledge”
J. Budziszewki, University of Texas at Austin
Chapter Five: Aquinas’s Second Reason for the Necessity of Divine Law: Certainty of Knowledge with Respect to Particular and Contingent Moral Actions
Steven J. Brust
Chapter Six: Burying the Wrong Corpse: Second Thoughts on the Protestant Prejudice toward Natural Law Thinking
J. Daryl Charles, the Acton Institute
Chapter Seven: Natural Law and the Law Today
Hadley Arkes, Amherst College
Chapter Eight: Thomas Aquinas’s Concept of Natural Law: A Guide to Healthy Liberalism
Christopher Wolfe, Marquette University
Product details
| Published | Oct 15 2018 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 1 |
| ISBN | 9781978757769 |
| Imprint | Lexington Books |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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With essays by some of the best writers on the natural law, including J. Budziszewski, Steven Long, Hadley Harkes, Christopher Wolfe, and one of the last essays written by the late, great Ralph McInerny (with the very characteristic title, “A Natural Lawman at the O.K. Corral”), this volume is a superb resource and that unique accomplishment in modern publishing: a collection of essays that fits together, makes a coherent argument, and is not filled with essays you don’t want. Editors Brust and Wolfe have done a nice piece of work here bringing these essays together.”
Randall B. Smith, University of St. Thomas, Houston
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The editors of Natural Law Today have done us a great service by crafting a volume containing many of the most luminous authorities on natural law. The contributions by Pakaluk, Budziszewki, and Arkes are particularly enlightening. One chapter alone, the essay by the late, great Ralph McInerny, is well worth the price of the volume. No student of the natural law, indeed no professor of the natural law, can afford to miss this book.
Christopher Kaczor, Loyola Marymount University
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An extraordinarily well designed collection of essays, Natural Law Today: The Present State of the Perennial Philosophy covers the key aspects of the philosophy of natural law such as metaphysics and human nature, moral universalism and rational cogency, faith and reason, and the issue of natural rights and liberal political order. Led by the stellar authorities on natural law such as Arkes, McInerny, Budziszewski and Wolfe, the authors are uniformly outstanding in their contributions. This book deserves to become the standard work for a clear and comprehensive account of natural law.
John P. Hittinger, University of St. Thomas, Houston
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