Natural Law - AO2 Flashcards
What would John Calvin say about natural law?
- Looked to scripture as the Word of God and primary source of morality
- Would argue natural law is un-Christian
- However non-Catholic thinkers such as Martin Luther and Richard Hooker would use natural law
What would be Bernice Hamiltons objection? (Quote)
- ‘right reason in accordance with human nature’ would mean it is accessible to all, but not all accept it
- ambiguity of understanding of law leads to doubt
- “not a law in any known sense of the word… thus inaccessible save through (dubious) interpreters”
What is the most significant argument against natural law?
- suffers from vagueness about what should be done just like other theories of virtue ethics
- disallows us from knowing what exactly to do, knowing a general principle does not help
- to preserve life becomes hard during wartime, may have to kill innocents, e.g bomb on Japan
- If an infant in the womb is a person as much as the mother who is privileged if the pregnancy would kill the mother?
What other issue does Pope Paul VI’s arise? (Quote)
- the idea of unclear conclusions which would allow construction of natural law arguments that point in opposing directions
- Pope Paul VI’s encyclical, obeying natural law would insist on preserving and encouraging life, would mean its wrong to use artificial birth control
- “marital act must of necessity retain… procreation of human life”
What would opponents of Pope Paul argue?
- part of human nature is using our intellect to determine what is best for human flourishing
- e.g Over-population may damage preservation of life, primary precept of natural law needs to justify artificial birth control using reason
- they did not reject natural law but pointed it another direction
- German Grisez would argue that these opponents had misunderstood natural law theory, the problem still remains.
Why can Aquinas be criticised on Aristotles principle?
- reliance on belief that everything has purpose, so human nature has a purpose
- so is natural law doomed if the metaphysic upon which it rests is mistaken?
- Finnis would deal with this by arguing in terms of the nature of human as she is, rather than their purpose
- Bertrand Russel’s fallacy of composition
Can natural law said to be rational, why and why not?
- Use of practical reasoning and common-sense deems it rational
- However, humans have a complex nature, not a single ‘fixed’ human nature
Is natural law ‘flexible’, why and why not?
- Can be deemed flexible due to secondary precepts allowing adaptation to cultures
- Neilsen questions the unchanging nature of the primary precepts using cultural relativism
- Gareth Moore would say our nature differs and is a product of culture and society, e.g Nazi Germany
is the principle of double effect a strength or a weakness, why?
- Can be good as it allows the solving of the problem of conflicting secondary precepts
- However, brings in consequentialism through the back door, you can do terrible things because of double effect
How can Natural Law be linked with Agape?
- Jesus broke opposed legalism and broke rules to do the most loving thing
- The primary precepts do not allow direct bending of the rules
- manuals would fall to this weakness
Does natural law contain conflict?
- Natural law can be said to have conflicting rules, as with any absolutist theory
- What do we do if two universal rules come into conflict with each other?
What does Pope Benedict think?
- Natural Law provides a lost post-modern secular society with objective values and truth
- this loss in post-modern society is described as ‘dictatorship of relativism’
Is Natural Law autonomous?
- allows the individual to work out what is right and wrong through reason
- No reliance on religious authority, scripture or tradition
- Primary precept of worship of god contradicts this
Is Natural Law considered outdated?
- Can be said to be out of touch with 21st Century society
- Leads to homophobia, intolerance of other culture
What is Naturalistic Fallacy?
- how we are is not the same as how we ought to be
- if something is natural it is good
- Sex produces babies, does not mean every act of sex ought to be open to procreation