This document discusses the concept of classical naturalism and natural law. Some key points:
1. Natural law holds that there are certain immutable principles of morality that exist beyond human-made laws and govern proper human behavior and society.
2. These principles are discoverable by human reason by considering human nature and purposes. Natural law precepts aim to order society in a way that allows humans to fulfill their natural ends.
3. When human-made laws conflict with natural law, they are considered invalid. The document traces discussions of concepts like natural law from ancient Greek philosophers like Plato and Aristotle.
This document discusses the concept of classical naturalism and natural law. Some key points:
1. Natural law holds that there are certain immutable principles of morality that exist beyond human-made laws and govern proper human behavior and society.
2. These principles are discoverable by human reason by considering human nature and purposes. Natural law precepts aim to order society in a way that allows humans to fulfill their natural ends.
3. When human-made laws conflict with natural law, they are considered invalid. The document traces discussions of concepts like natural law from ancient Greek philosophers like Plato and Aristotle.
This document discusses the concept of classical naturalism and natural law. Some key points:
1. Natural law holds that there are certain immutable principles of morality that exist beyond human-made laws and govern proper human behavior and society.
2. These principles are discoverable by human reason by considering human nature and purposes. Natural law precepts aim to order society in a way that allows humans to fulfill their natural ends.
3. When human-made laws conflict with natural law, they are considered invalid. The document traces discussions of concepts like natural law from ancient Greek philosophers like Plato and Aristotle.
This document discusses the concept of classical naturalism and natural law. Some key points:
1. Natural law holds that there are certain immutable principles of morality that exist beyond human-made laws and govern proper human behavior and society.
2. These principles are discoverable by human reason by considering human nature and purposes. Natural law precepts aim to order society in a way that allows humans to fulfill their natural ends.
3. When human-made laws conflict with natural law, they are considered invalid. The document traces discussions of concepts like natural law from ancient Greek philosophers like Plato and Aristotle.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 27
CLASSICAL NATURALISM
Doctrine of Natural Law
Nature of the doctrine The adherent of natural law believes that beyond, and superior to, the laws made by man are certain higher principles, the principles of natural law. These principles are immutable and eternal. Man-made laws may vary from one community to another with respect to matters of everyday importance, but with regard to the highest matters, man- made law should be in accord with the principles of natural law. When man-made law conflicts with natural law, it lacks validity: it is not a valid, binding law at all. Natural law is 'the theory that there are certain principles of human conduct, awaiting discovery by human reason, with which man-made law must conform if it is to be valid. For e.g. the government, in order to reduce population growth, introduces legislation that legalizes the abortion of an unborn child at any time up until the time when it would be born. China is an excellent e.g. 1 child policy. By many this would be regarded as the taking of life, and contrary to the will of God. Such would be the opinion of the Catholic Church, Judaism and Islam - in whose view abortion at any stage of pregnancy constitutes (subject to certain exceptions) the taking of life and is therefore contrary to the will of God. Opposition to the hunting or testing of wild animals for pleasure or commercial gains , or who oppose the use of live animals for the purpose of research into the safety of consumer products such as cosmetics, these people base their case on an appeal to conscience, to a code that stands above man-made law, to a higher morality, to standards that have universal validity and applicability. E.g. killing of whales for its oil to make perfume etc. If you side with these people you have been unknowingly subscribing to this doctrine of natural all the while. The doctrine of natural law has a long history. Notions that foreshadow the doctrine are found amongst the ideas of the philosophers of the golden age of Greece, in the fifth century before Christ. The doctrine reached a form that we can recognize in the writings of the Stoic school of philosophers in the early centuries of the Roman Empire. The doctrine was adopted by the Church and took on a religious appeal. It remained a key element of the Catholic Church throughout post-reformation history, and remains such at our own day. The doctrine inspired much of the thinking of secular philosophers in the sixteenth century, contributing in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to a parallel doctrine of natural rights. Natural Law Why natural law? What is natural about it? The word 'natural' in natural law refers to an idea that provides the foundation of natural law - namely the reason why natural law ought to be obeyed. Man is part of nature. Within nature, man has a nature. His nature inclines him towards certain ends - to procreate children, to protect his family, to ensure his survival. To seek such ends is natural to him. Those things which assist the achieving of such ends assist the purposes of nature. Thus, laws that further the achievement by man of his natural ends assist the achievement of the purposes of nature. Such laws, laws that are in accord with the ultimate purposes of man, constitute natural law. What about the rights demanded by the LGBT movement? Does it fit into the concept of natural law? What are the motivation behind such movement? To procreate children, to protect family institution, to ensure human survival? What does natural law consist of? What are its precepts? Natural law ordains that society should be ordered in such a way as to assist man in fulfilling his purpose of existence. Since violence will impede this fulfillment, violence is contrary to natural law. Since peace assists this fulfillment, man should honour promises, since to dishonour a promise can lead to disharmony or even violence. Since man's natural ends are the same and constant for all mankind, it is natural that the principles of natural law are constant. Thus, natural law comprises a body of permanent, eternal truths, truths embodying precepts of universal applicability, part of the immutable order of things, unaffected by changing human beliefs or attitudes. Discoverable by reason It is a characteristic of natural law that the truths that it embodies are not made known. The truths of natural law are ascertainable by man through the exercise of the reason with which he is by nature endowed. The truths of natural law are determined by observation followed by reflection: What are man's natural ends? What ordering of society best enables these ends to be achieved? Despite its transcendence, man discovers the content of natural law for himself. God does not tell him - having given man the intelligence and reason, He does not need to. Distinction between Natural Law and Man-Made Law This brings us to the final characteristic of natural law thinking: the distinction between natural law and man-made law. The natural lawyer recognises the existence of (and the need for) man- made law but regards this as inferior to natural law. Further, if man-made law conflicts with natural law, man-made law is deemed to lack validity. Development of Natural Law Thinking Ancient Greece Plato and Aristotle. From Plato we can traced that element of natural law thinking that regards values as having an eternal existence and an eternal truth. Qualities such as justice and truth exist in their own right. All men can do is to attempt to reproduce them. To reproduce these qualities men must seek knowledge of the eternal truths, a quest that is man's finest endeavour. In Plato's Dialogues, he believed it was possible for man to attain knowledge of the external truths, for example, 'goodness', justice', 'courage'. For Plato the forms of 'goodness', 'virtue', 'honesty were eternal and immutable. They constituted moral principles of universal and timeless validity existing above and unaffected by changing human attitudes or beliefs, moral principles by reference to which all human actions and views must be judged. Are human race now facing a crisis of morality? Self-destruction and extinction of human race? Think of unfolding human drama? Aristotle' did not subscribe to Plato's theory of forms. Nonetheless, the element in his thinking had contributed a further aspect to what was to become part of natural law doctrine. Aristotle was concerned with the world as he saw it existing around him. He was a zoologist, in particular a marine zoologist, with an acute observation of the minutest details of organisms observable by the human eye. From his studies of the natural world he became conscious of the fact that natural phenomena were in a state of perpetual change - the child growing into an adult; the seed growing into a plant. There was always progress. Throughout the living world, Aristotle saw that, in the birth and growth of animals and plants, the earlier stages always lead up to a final development. The process is constant. There is always potential for further change: in everything there is a potentiality striving to reach a further stage of actuality. However, modern scientific and technological innovations have redefined many aspects of Plato and Aristotle natural law principles. They are challenging almost all aspects of traditional, cultural and religious practices and recognized social norms. Can you think some that are under threat or have vanished? Thus, for Aristotle the universe is dynamic, always engaged in the process of transformation. The philosophy that everything that exists has a predetermined end is termed teleology (from the Greek teleos, end, and logos, rule or principle). Aristotle's teleology extended beyond the individual phenomena of the natural world to the activities of creatures within it, including human beings. For Aristotle, the highest form of human society lay in the Greek city state (a polis) . It was the polis that provided the society in which man could achieve his culminating fulfillment. Thus from the start of organised human society, from its most primitive forms, through the various stages of agricultural existence to the building of cities, and the creating of political societies such as that at Athens, mankind was progressing towards that which had been its end from the beginning. Aristotles observation can be seen in the growth of villages and towns to become cities and megalopolis across the world with modern amenities etc. In the Nichomachean Ethics, in which Aristotle discusses the nature of justice, he says: 'There are two sorts of political justice, one natural and the other legal. Among the gods, indeed, justice presumably never changes at all; but in our world, although there is such a thing as natural law, everything is subject to change; but still some things are so by nature and some are not, and it is easy to see what sort of thing, among those that admit of being otherwise, is so by nature and what is not, but is legal and conventional ... Rules of justice established by convention or agreement and on the ground of expediency may be compared to standard measures. Similarly laws that are not natural but man-made are not the same everywhere, because forms of government are not the same either; but everywhere there is only one natural form of government, namely that which is best. The element of Aristotles natural law thinking can readily be seen . In this passage where he says: 'If the written law tells against our case already we must appeal to the universal law, and insist on a greater equity and justice.' Here also we have a hint of natural law thinking. Aristotle accepted that there is a natural and universal right and wrong, apart from any human ordinance or convention. Perhaps for the Greeks of his time the notion that higher laws existed than those of man needed no special mention. In Plato's idealism and in Aristotle's teleology, we can see the Greek notion of a law higher than that of men with other elements, to form the full doctrine of natural law. The Stoics The next development in the history of the natural law doctrine can be found in the writings of the authors who form the Stoic school of philosophy. Stoicism held influence from the lifetime of its founder Zeno (during the third century before Christ) down to about the-fourth century AD. It was the prevailing philosophy during the greater part of the Roman Republic and Empire. The contribution of the Stoic school of philosophy may be represented by the writings of Cicero, Seneca and the Emperor Marcus Aurelius. In Cicero's work On Duties the following passages occur. 'Besides, the Stoics' ideal- is to live consistently with nature throughout our lives we ought invariably to aim at morally right courses of action, 'Indeed this idea - that one must not injure anybody else for one's own profit - is not only natural law, an international valid principle: The whole point and intention of these statutes is that one citizen shall live safely with another."' '... the finest and noblest characters prefer a life of dedication to a life of self-indulgence; and one may conclude that such men conform with nature and are therefore incapable of doing harm to their fellow men. '... neglect of the common interest is unnatural, because it is unjust ... nature's law promotes and coincides with the common interest.' In his Meditations, Marcus Aurelius wrote: 'If the power of thought is universal among mankind, so likewise is the possession of reason, making us rational creatures. It follows, therefore, that this reason speaks no less universally to us all with its "thou shalt" or "thou shalt not". So then there is a world-law; which in turn means that we are all fellow-citizens and share a common citizenship, and that the world is a single city."' Injustice is a sin. Nature has constituted rational beings for their own mutual benefit, each to help his fellows according to their worth, and in no wise to do them hurt; and to contravene her will is plainly to sin against this eldest of all the deities. Untruthfulness, too, is a sin, and against the same goddess. For Nature is the nature of Existence itself, and existence connotes the kinship of all created beings. Truth is but another name for this Nature, the original creator of all true things. From these passages it can be seen that the Stoic school added flesh to the bones of natural law. Tolerance, forgiveness, compassion, fortitude, uprightness, sincerity, honesty - these were the qualities that the Stoics believed that natural law, required of men. These were the qualities to which reason dictated that man should aspire in order that he might live in accordance with what nature had ordained,. The Stoic ideals and thinking contributed to the evolution of the universality of the doctrine of natural law. Stoics saw mankind as one brotherhood. They looked outside the city state, outside the Empire and saw the whole of the human race as being bound and united by the brotherly love that the precepts of natural law enjoined. Christianity The parallels between the tenets of Stoicism and the teaching of Christ come readily to mind. Stoicism taught that men should love one another, since this was in accord with nature and thus was man's duty. Christianity taught -'Love one another', and it added 'and if you do, there is a bonus - life everlasting.' For the Christian the reward was Heaven, coupled with satisfaction of knowing that the sinner (among whom no doubt were numbered one's enemies) would suffer the eternal torments of Hell. The teaching of Christ provided a code of conduct, but not a comprehensive theology. The creation of the latter was the accomplishment of the Fathers of the early church, principally St Augustine, St Ambrose and St Gregory. Having been born into the Roman world it was natural that these men should reflect in their writings aspects of the philosophies of Greece and Rome that could be enlisted to give intellectual support to the teachings of the new church. The incorporation of natural law into Christian theology was accomplished at a later period, but when St Augustine wrote 'If a law be unjust, it is no law at all'. This was further demonstrated in Gratian's Decretum, a collection of texts dealing with canon law, with a commentary designed to reconcile inconsistencies and contradictions that had accumulated during the previous centuries. In the Decretum, natural law is treated as part of the immutable law of God. It was natural law anterior in time, and superior, to man-made law to the extent that man-made law ran counter to natural law, it was null and void. St Thomas Aquinas It was in the work of St Thomas Aquinas, principally in the Summa Theologica, that the final and most complete synthesis of the classic doctrine of natural law and the doctrine of the Christian church was achieved. The writings of Aristotle had been lost to the western world from the fall of the Empire in the west and only became available to western Scholars in the twelfth century. It was the achievement of St Thomas to reconcile the philosophy in newly- discovered writings with the doctrines of Christianity and to do so in such away as to strengthen mightily the intellectual basis on which Christianity rested. St Thomas's chain of thinking is this. God is the creator. The world, the universe, the cosmos is his creation. Everything, physical and intellectual, stems from Him. When God created man He enabled him to know truth. Truths are of three kinds. Divine truths are those made known to man by revelation. For example, it is revealed to man by the Holy Scriptures that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, who was sent into the world; that, by his death on the cross, a means of salvation should be offered to all those who confess their sins and acknowledge Christ as their Saviour; further that it is God's will that on six days should man labour, and on the seventh, rest; that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was a virgin, and that at her death she was taken up into Heaven. Next came those truths that man can disover by exercise of speculation, by what St Thomas calls 'speculative reason and truths which man discovers by the exercise of 'practical reason'. Matters that man can discover by the exercise of practical reason Aquinas terms the eternal law. For Aquinas, natural law consists of participation by man in the law. To discover how man's affairs should be regulated it is necessary, Aquinas said, to proceed, by the exercise of human reason, from the first principles of natural law. The first principles of natural law are immutable, eternal, and binding on all mankind. For example, if we deduce from the principle that man should live at peace with his fellows, the principle that debts should be repaid, we find that: This conclusion holds in the majority of cases. In a passage of crucial importance St Thomas explains the relationship between man-made law and natural law. He says, 'St Augustine says: "There is no law unless it be just. So, the validity of law depends upon its justice. But in human affairs a thing is said to be just when it accords a right with the rule of reason: and, as we have already seen, the first rule of reason is the natural law. Thus all humanly enacted laws are in accord with reason to the extent that they derive from the natural law. And if a human law is at variance in any particular with the natural law, it is no longer legal, but rather a corruption of law.' This raises the question, if a human law conflicts with natural law, and thus 'is no longer legal' (or as we might express the matter today, it lacks validity) does this mean that a citizen may in good conscience disobey it? Can he say, 'For me, this is not law'? In answering this question, St Thomas explains that law may be unjust, by which he means in conflict with natural law, in one of two ways. First, 'by being contrary to human good, through being opposed to the things mentioned above - either in respect of the end, as when an authority imposes on his subjects burdensome laws, conducive, not to the common good, but rather to his own cupidity or vainglory; or in respect of the author, as when a man makes a law that goes beyond the power committed to him. The like are acts of violence rather than laws, because, as Augustine says, "A law that is not just, seems to be no law at all." Wherefore such laws do not bind in conscience, except perhaps in order to avoid scandal or disturbance, for which cause a man should even yield his right. 'Secondly, laws may be unjust through being opposed to the divine good: such are the laws of tyrants inducing to idolatry or to anything else contrary to the divine law; and laws of this kind must nowise be observed because, as stated in Acts v 29, "we ought to obey God rather than men".' So if a ruler makes a law that conflicts with natural law, for example a law that people's legal rights and economic entitlements should vary according to the colour of their skin, then notwithstanding the law's injustice, the law should not be disobeyed, since of greater import than the validity or invalidity of the law is the need to avoid disturbance. For the sake of avoiding disturbance, the citizen should 'yield his right'. In modern jargon, law and order take precedence over matters of justice. On the other hand, if the state makes a law that 'is opposed to the divine law' - the content of which it is the Church's function to decree - then man is freed from the obligation to obey. (Whether or not a man-made law conflicts with divine law is a question for the Church to determine.) Thus if the state makes a law that the citizen regards as unjust he should obey it. If the state makes a law that the Church ordains to be unjust, he should not. St Thomas's contribution was to provide a synthesis between the Judeo- Christian understanding of law and justice, with its view of law as derived from revelation of God's intention for the world, and the Greco-Roman view of law as being interdependent with reason. St Thomas's integration of Aristotle's philosophy into the structures of Christian theology gained official acceptance in 1270. His view of natural law has continued to provide the foundation of the thinking of the Catholic Church until today. Has the Catholic Church renounces their view of natural law of late over issues of priest performing child prostitution and Pope recognition of same sex marriage? The 17th Century Although it has been within the theology of the Catholic Church that the doctrine of natural law has found its fullest expression, the seeds of the doctrine were sown before the Christian era. Natural law could provide the foundation of a system of ethics, a reason why men should behave in a certain way, that was independent of the fact that God's will, revealed in the Scriptures, directed men to act in the same manner. It remains to be said that during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries there grew up a doctrine that had affinities with, and shared certain of the foundations with, the doctrine of natural law: the doctrine of natural rights. Conclusion If this chapter was intended as a history of the doctrine more would have been said at various stages of our account, and consideration would have had to be given to the importance of the doctrine as an influence on philosophy, on the development of law, and on the conduct of affairs of state.