scholarly journals Natural Law and Ethical Non-Naturalism

2020 ◽  
pp. 095394682096289
Author(s):  
John D. O’Connor

There is a lack of clarity in the literature about what constitutes the natural law approach to ethics and what is incompatible with it. The standard, and largely historical, way of understanding the natural law approach risks overlooking theoretical differences of fundamental importance regarding what the natural law approach is usually taken to uphold. Against Craig Paterson, I argue that a necessary condition for an ethical account to uphold fully the natural law approach is that it does not contain any dependence upon the metaethical category of non-naturalism understood in non-supernaturalist (secular) terms. Using the ‘new natural law’ theory of John Finnis to illustrate my case, I also argue that an ethical theory can be largely in keeping with the natural law approach but nonetheless contain elements at odds with it: the issue is more complex than a simple binary. This is an under-explored possibility in natural law ethics.

2020 ◽  
pp. 65-101
Author(s):  
Douglas Flippen

John Finnis joins Grisez in providing a new foundation for Thomistic natural law theory. To accomplish this, they closely associate good as perfection with good as to be pursued and have both senses grasped together by the practical intellect independently of the speculative intellect. The practical intellect then presents good to the will and motivates it to act for the first time. Since good as perfection is inherently speculative and since the intellect becomes practical only depending on the will, their notion of the practical intellect is incoherent and their new foundation is deeply flawed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 228-249
Author(s):  
Lloyd Steffen

Abstract Opposition to physician-assisted suicide is widespread in Christian ethics. However, on a topic as controversial as physician-assisted suicide, no one can reasonably speak for “the Christian” perspective. Natural-law and, specifically, just-war thinking are claimed in the Christian tradition, yet the natural-law contribution to a Christian ethical analysis of physician-assisted suicide requires explanation and defense. Natural-law ethical theory affirms the central role of reason in moral thinking and provides a theoretical resource in contemporary ethics to assist in analyzing specific moral issues, problems, and conflicts. This essay seeks to demonstrate how just-war thinking, derived from natural-law tradition, allows movement from the theoretical world of natural-law theory to the practical world of normative ethics. Here the case is made that the just-war model of ethics helps elucidate the moral problematic involved in physician-assisted suicide while clarifying direction on this particularly thorny and controversial problem.


2020 ◽  
pp. 39-64
Author(s):  
Diego Poole-Derqui

El presente trabajo es una valoración crítica de la teoría de la ley natural de Germain Grisez y John Finnis, máximos exponentes de la New Natural Law Theory (NNLT), en contraste con la doctrina de Santo Tomás. Está dividido en tres partes. En la primera se compara la ontología del iusnaturalismo de la NNLT con el iusnaturalismo tomista. La segunda parte trata sobre el conocimiento de la ley natural, prestando especial atención a la naturaleza del conocimiento práctico según el Aquinate, para mostrar la diferencia que le separa de la NNLT. En el último capítulo, titulado Marginación de las virtudes en el conocimiento de la ley natural. La «kantianización» de Grisez y Finnis, se argumenta por qué la teoría del conocimiento práctico de la NNLT está más próxima a Kant que a Aristóteles o Santo Tomás.


2012 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 451-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua D. Goldstein

Abstract. The new natural theory developed by Germain Grisez, John Finnis, Robert George and other new natural lawyers is presented by both its friends and its liberal critics as more concerned with absolute values than theorizing human freedom. This concern is seemingly borne out by the new natural lawyers' narrow and exclusionary sexual ethic. However, this article suggests that the new natural law theory might be rescued from both these groups and shown to contain a robust and attractive account of freedom. Through a reconstruction of the new natural law theory's unique mode of arriving at moral action, this article suggests the new natural law theory integrates three distinct dimensions of autonomy which are often kept separate: a Kantian moral autonomy, a Rawlsian personal autonomy and a Hegelian ethical autonomy. The result is a new natural law theory—and a sexual ethic—more liberating than either the friends or critics of the new natural law theory would seem to allow.Résumé. La nouvelle théorie de la loi naturelle, développée par Germain Grisez, John Finnis, Robert George et plusieurs autres défenseurs de la nouvelle loi naturelle, est présentée par ses défenseurs et critiques libéraux comme étant plus concernée par les valeurs absolues que par la théorisation de la liberté humaine. Cette préoccupation semble être née de la conception étroite et exclusive que font les théoriciens de la nouvelle loi naturelle de l'éthique sexuelle. Par contre, cet article suggère que la nouvelle théorie de la loi naturelle peut être secourue de ces deux groupes et démontre que la nouvelle loi naturelle contient une description robuste et intéressante du concept de liberté. À travers une reconstruction du mode d'arrivée à l'action morale unique à la nouvelle théorie de la loi naturelle, cet article suggère que la nouvelle théorie de la loi naturelle intègre trois dimensions distinctes de l'autonomie qui sont souvent gardées séparer: l'autonomie morale kantienne, l'autonomie personnelle rawlsienne et l'autonomie éthique hégélienne. Le résultat est une nouvelle théorie de la loi naturelle, et une éthique sexuelle, plus libérée que ce que les défenseurs et critiques de la nouvelle théorie de la loi naturelle semblent permettre.


Legal Studies ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 14-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Milton

Natural law is discussed by almost every modern writer on jurisprudence; but with a few exceptions - of which John Finnis' Natural Law and Natural Rights is the most substantial - the impression given is that it is of historical interest only, that it has in some way been discredited, or at least superseded, by legal positivism. The implicit idea - and here legal positivism borrows from Comte - is that natural law represented some earlier ‘metaphysical’ stage which was then followed by ‘scientific’ legal positivism. This account requires the existence of a natural law theory that dominated juristic and philosophical thinking until the eighteenth century, when it was overthrown by Hume and Bentham. Hume, the story goes, found the decisive argument against the natural law theory; while Bentham created the new theory oflegal positivism. The argument Hume discovered was that ought cannot be derived from is; and this, it is widely supposed, is fatal to all varieties of natural law.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 1044-1066
Author(s):  
Pablo Antonio Lago

Abstract Laymen in general associate natural law theories to conservative moral conceptions, like traditional marriage of a man and a woman. That makes sense when we notice Catholic Church's position about matrimony or even academic marriage conceptions as the one claimed by John Finnis. But would be possible to defend the so called “marriage equality” in natural law grounds? This paper aims to answer this question affirmatively. Departing from a critical analysis of Finnis’ natural law theory and his marriage conception, I argue that a better matrimony conception needs to be grounded on a wide vision of human sexuality, which encompasses lesbian and gay couples. Instead of procreation (which is one of the marriage points in Finnis’ conception), human experience shows that sex is not limited to breeding - it is a way people can achieve pleasure and high levels of intimacy, regardless their sexual orientation. I conclude that this way of conceptualizing human sexuality is “far more evident” than the one suggested by Finnis and is also consistent with Germain Grisez's interpretation of Aquinas’ first principle of practical reason - with which Finnis himself agrees.


Author(s):  
Anton Didikin

The paper interprets the arguments of Thomas Aquinas on natural law as a way to achieve the common good, which had a significant impact on John Finnis’ natural law theory. The author reveals the conceptual foundations of J. Finnis’ understanding the morally justified actions of people in the community aimed at the obtaining of basic benefits, and the debatable issues of his theory in modern philosophical and legal research. The author arrives to the conclusion that the reinterpretation of J. Finnis analysis of the grounds for ethically significant actions leads him to formulate an instrumental approach to natural law as a rational way to implement a decent life.


2012 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-115
Author(s):  
Bob Watt

Here we will discuss the „right to die‟; should a person, in certain circumstances, lawfully be able to call upon the assistance of another to bring their life to an end? The proposal is that the answer should be „yes‟ , but the novelty of this essay is in its argument that such an answer can be provided by a „natural lawyer‟ - which is to say a person who believes that law has some minimal, inescapable, moral content. This answer is quite contrary to that proposed by Professor John Finnis, the leading modern exponent of natural law theory. The matter is of particular relevance because of the recent death of Tony Nicklinson who unsuccessfully sought a Declaration that a doctor would not face prosecution for giving him a lethal injection. The High Court declined to issue such an order saying that Parliament would need to give specific statutory authority for such a step. A draft statute is provided near the end of the article in order to stimulate supply of the High Court‟s request. The practical argument herein is therefore addressed, at least in part, to Parliament, but the criticism of John Finnis‟ theory will, it is hoped, appeal to an academic audience. This article aims to restore emotion to its proper place as a tool for evaluating human practice, and thus claim that emotion has a place alongside reason as a basis for law as an institution, the drafting of particular laws, and adjudication. Reference to poetry, music, and myth are used in order to illustrate the claim that humans are uniquely emotional beings and to illustrate the argument being made.. These are not idiosyncratic "add-ons‟; in an ideal world all of the music and poetry would have been embedded in the text of the article because they communicate some of the ideas herein more effectively than discursive argument. The reader is urged to listen to all the music and to read the poems and myth in their entirety. Furthermore lawyers and philosophers are trained to analyse words; the words of the poetry and music are not of paramount importance. The reader is asked instead to consider the affect raised.


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