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Natural Law and Natural Rights

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Language
  
English

Author
  
John Finnis

ISBN
  
0199599149

3.7/5
Goodreads

Originally published
  
1980

Page count
  
500 (2011, 2nd edition)

Subject
  
Natural law

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Publisher
  
1980 (Oxford University Press)

Media type
  
Print (Hardcover and Paperback)

Pages
  
500 (2011, 2nd edition)

Similar
  
Works by John Finnis, Jurisprudence books

Natural law and natural rights 1 4 2014


Natural Law and Natural Rights is a 1980 book by philosopher John Finnis. A restatement of natural law doctrine, it is considered a seminal contribution to the philosophy of law. The work was commissioned by H. L. A. Hart for the Clarendon Law Series.

Contents

Summary

Finnis argues that social theory cannot be value free and that Humean ethics, unlike genuine (as opposed to neo-scholastic) Thomist ethics, commits a naturalistic fallacy. He bases his radically rearticulated Aristotelian political and legal theory on dialectically defended first principles of practical reason and methodological principles of practical reasonableness (morality). He defends the following basic human goods: life, knowledge, play, aesthetic experience, sociability (friendship), practical reasonableness, and religion, defined as "all those beliefs that can be called matters of ultimate concern; questions about the point of human existence."

Scholarly reception

Philosophy lecturer Stephen Buckle sees Finnis's list of proposed basic goods as plausible, but notes that Finnis's account of the basic requirements of practical reasonableness is more controversial. Buckle sees Finnis's requirement of "respect for every basic value in every act" as intended both to rule out consequentialism in ethics and also to support the moral viewpoint of the Catholic Church on a range of contentious issues, including contraception and masturbation, which in his view undermines its plausibility.

References

Natural Law and Natural Rights Wikipedia