Natural Law Theories - LAW 531 Natural Law Theories - LAW 531
Natural Law Theories - LAW 531 Natural Law Theories - LAW 531
Natural Law Theories - LAW 531 Natural Law Theories - LAW 531
NATURAL LAW
Based on unchanging guiding principles to which human laws are expected to conform
Laws and morals intersect: creates law to conform to notions of good, morality or ethics
Aquinas created a new type of theology, connecting it with Aristotelian reason, order, virtue and
community
What is law?
Law is a binding set of obligations on people to achieve virtue, which is directed by reason.
Thus, will of a ruler can become law so long as it is based on reason
Purpose of law is the wellbeing of society
Used Aristotle’s teleology to explain that individual good is inferior to the common good
Law = rational ordering of things concerning the common good; The maker of law – the ruler –
uses practical reason to rule the perfect community
Social contract: people should give up individual liberty where there is a conflict with the needs
of strong government (a monarch), in return for protection
Natural state of human is ‘solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short’; no law, no concept of right or
wrong
The Sovereignty is not one person, but a group of individuals (commonwealth)
Individual liberty
Everyone’s free and equal, with property rights and limited government intervention
Separation of powers
Role of govt: preservation of property
Inalienable Rights:
Social contract: allow men to enjoy their inalienable rights, given by God – right to life, liberty,
property
Nature was given to us by God, but it did not provide property protection. Only when we mix
our labour with nature and transform property then we can claim land
Labour = work of labours, animals and anything over which the land owner possess control
During WWII, Nazi genocide prompted a rethink of positivist method and a revival of natural
law
Argued that Nazi Germany did not have the internal morality needed for a legal system to be
valid - Moral issues SHOULD BE considered by the courts
C.f. Hart – moral issues should NOT be considered in a legal system, law cannot be invalidated
on the basis of morals, only a retrospective law can be enacted to amend the bad law
Inner Morality of Law – how to make a legal system work for the good of the community
the inner morality of law (procedural natural law) is a lower law, c.f. to natural law, it is like
what a carpenter would use to make sure a building would hold up
concerned with how the system of rules governing human conduct should be constructed and
administered
a balancing act: diagram
certain rules of conduct are required to maintain a society are ‘pre-legal’ – precede the existence
of law and a legal system; need these rules as a minimum for survival, to enable us to live
together and be able to continue our existence with each other
5 facts of human condition
Rules are need for protection of persons, property and promises and to impose sanctions
Revival of Hobbes’ and Locke’s social contract
Legal system survives because people accept the rules as they are fair
No connection with God, observations about nature or morality in the sense of goodness
Natural law is derived on the basis of a set of self-evident basic goods on which human
existence is based
Finnis’ Structure
Multi-layered method:
7 innate basic human goods: self evident; everyone strives for them; exist before morals; exist
irrespective of culture.
o LIFE: living and living well, procreation (Finnis is against abortion and artificial
reproduction)
o KNOWLEDGE
o PRATICAL REASONABLENESS: use of reasons in actions, habits and practical
attitudes
o PLAY
o AESTHTIC EXPERIENCE
o SOCIABILITY OR FRIENDSHIP
o RELIGION
The first moral principle: assists human decision making, decide between right and wrong
o In voluntarily acting for human goods, and in avoiding what is opposed to them, one
ought to choose (and otherwise will) those and only those possibilities whose will is
compatible with integral human fulfilment
o Provides a set of moral and ethical criteria attached to the actions that guide the
goods
o Combined with goods, they make up natural law
Natural law’s claim of to be universal and immutable: human conduct is clearly driven by
context, politics, and historical circumstance
Natural law is simply an argument for personal, conservative views. It supports unfair laws and
is based on political structures designed to prop up inequalities – Finnis
The theory simply doesn’t work!
Theory is irrational, and questions of law never need to be concerned with morals (modernism
and positivism).