Natural Law Flashcards
what is the attractiveness of natural law
- it is believed to be universal, prescriptive, consistent, rational and social
- it exists in religious and non religious forms
- is the basis of many forms of Christian ethics especially Roman Catholicism
why is cognitive language important
- because natural law ethicists argue acts are intrinsically right or wrong meaning the consequences do not matter
- they believe that ethical statements are objective and cognitive - we are therefore speaking about facts that can be supported through argument - natural law ethicists believe that they can talk meaningfully about right or wrong and other people will understand what they mean
what is telos in relation to Aquinas and Aristotle
- non religious form of natural law developed by Aristotle, adapted theologically by Aquinas
- Aristotle argued that everything in the universe including us has a purpose - part of growing up is learning what our purpose is
- Aquinas argued that as all things are created with a distinctive telos, when a person achieves their purpose they can be said to be in a state of eudaimonia or flourishing. As God is the efficient cause of nature (Genesis) the purpose of human existence is to live according to God’s purpose in nature by doing good and avoiding evil
what is eternal law
Aquinas describes this as the law that orders everything in the universe
the way the universe functions comes from the will and wisdom of the divinity
the idea of order and purpose in the universe is also used by Aquinas in his teleological argument
- mind of God - rational plan by which creation is ordered
- can only be partially known to us as mind of God
- access knowledge of it (what is right or wrong) through creation (window to God)
- humans have freedom/reason to actively participate in it
what is divine law
eternal law comes from observing the way God has ordered the universe and then applying reason to what can be observed
divine law instead comes through divine revelation which for Aquinas would be found in scripture or Church teachings
- laws instructed in OT and NT
- necessary to teach us with certainty about matters because we often fail in concluding right from wrong through the use of our reason
- but laws knowable through reason alone
what is natural law
- here Aquinas brings together two concepts and a divinity
- he joins practical wisdom and reason from Aristotle’s teachings suggesting that together they make up natural law
- he goes on to argue that natural law comes from God which allows him to say that the foundation of ethics come from God
- God’s creation reveals part of eternal law as it fulfils the purpose for which it was intended
- the rational creature’s participation of the eternal law
what is human law
- Aquinas defines human laws as particular determinations of natural law devised by human reason
- applying natural law and reason to human legal questions gives us human laws
- some have used mathematical comparison along the lines that complex maths equations depend on the fundamentals of maths as human laws depend on natural law and reason
- human reason means we desire to live an ordered society so we make laws using our reason
- if these laws are reasoned properly they would be in keeping with natural law (what is intended)
what is the key precept
do good, avoid evil
what are the primary precepts
- Aquinas agreed with Cicero’s notion that ‘true law is right reason in agreement with nature’
- reason is therefore able to reject those desires that are not part of God-given human nature
- human reason discerns five primary precepts:
- preserve life
- live in ordered societies
- worship God
- educate the young
- reproduce
what are the secondary precepts
- each society is able to develop them from the primary precepts
- marriage is derived from the primary precept of reproduction, need to educate the young and establish and ordered society e.g.
- however, for Christians marriage is reinforced through God’s revealed law, the Bible.
- any rule that helps mankind live up to the primary precepts
what is subjectivity in moral law
- Aquinas says that even in the objective moral system of natural laws subjectivity is necessary
- every act requires the right intention (internal law) as well as compliance with the law itself (external law) and sometimes in the absence of clear guidance this will depend on conscience and developing a good character (the virtues)
- example of subjectivity in natural law: doctrine of doubt effect which states an action is good if the primary intention is good even if there is bad indirect consequences providing this is not disproportionately evil compared with the good end
- so giving a dying woman pain relief (good end) even though this might shorten her life (unwilled indirect result) is permissible
what are the weaknesses of natural law
- not been able to determine what is meant by nature or natural - it should be clear that nature does not mean what happens in nature or among animals as their purposes are different from humans
- many things have multiple purposes - is sex for procreation, love or pleasure and do all three have to be fulfilled at the same time or can they be separated
- many accuse natural law and the doctrine of double effect as casuistry - used negatively to mean the clever use of arguments to get around a legal problem
- utilitarian’s consider the doctrine of double effect to be a confused form of consequentialism
- all forms of natural law suffer from the naturalistic fallacy - the idea that ethical statements can be derived from facts
why is natural law deontological
it is ethics focused on the intrinsic rightness and wrongness of actions
define natural law briefly
a deontological theory based on behaviour that is in keeping with given laws or moral rules (e.g. given by God) that exist independently of human societies and systems
- absolutist but not rooted in duty or in an externally imposed law but in our human nature and search for genuine happiness
define eudaimonia
living well, as an ultimate end in life which all other actions should lead towards
happiness we feel from living a good life and doing the right thing