Natural Law - AO1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is Natural Law? (1)

A
  • A theory where we are able to identify for ourselves the right or wrong action
  • It is about detecting the natural and moral way of living through reason
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2
Q

What would Peschke say about Natural Law? (Quote)

A

“Natural moral law is that moral order which man can recognise… by means of his reason, independent of his positive divine relation”

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3
Q

What is Eternal Law?

A
  • Principles by which God created and controls the universe

- We can work out its meaning through reason, e.g Adultery is wrong due to reason, not just the 10 commandments

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4
Q

What is Divine Law?

A
  • Sermon on the Mount Jesus introduces us to not a specific set of answers but the need for developing appropriate virtues
  • Jesus emphasises the spirit of the law rather than precise adherence to the letter
  • Nothing in Divine Law contradicts Natural Law
  • Revelations, e.g 10 commandments are affirmations of what is knowable by human reason
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5
Q

What is Natural Law?

A
  • God has willed that man has a natural inclination to do good with rational capacity to work out what is right and proper to do
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6
Q

What is Human Law? (Quote)

A
  • Man is a social animal that need regulations to function co-operatively
  • Human Law value is prudential and should not contradict Natural Law
  • “As it deviates from reason, it is called an unjust law” - regulation that contradicts Natural Law loses validity
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7
Q

Why does Aquinas reject Divine Command Theory?

A
  • Rightness of something is knowable in itself

- Morality is rooted in reason over scripture despite being justified and developed in scripture

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8
Q

What ethical theory is Natural Law a version of?

A

Virtue Ethics

  • Aquinas agrees with Aristotle that cultivating virtues is essential to a good life
  • Emphasises central role of Prudence, practical reason
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9
Q

What is the 1st Cardinal Virtue?

A

Prudence:

  • Concerned with intellect, Aristotle would say “right reason applied to practice”
  • Judge correctly what is right and wrong in each situation
  • Allows you to seek council of others
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10
Q

What is the 2nd Cardinal Virtue? (Quote)

A

Justice:

  • “permanent determination to give everyone his or her rightful due” - John A. Hardon
  • Legal rights can never outweigh natural ones
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11
Q

What is the 3rd Cardinal Virtue?

A

Fortitude:

  • Overcome fear and to remain steady in our will when faced with obstacles
  • Prudence and Justice are the virtues that decide what need to be done, Fortitude gives us the strength to do it
  • Rise above fears in defence of the Christian faith
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12
Q

What is the 4th Cardinal Virtue?

A

Temperance:

  • Restraint of our desires or passions
  • A disordered desire for sex, food or drink can have disastrous consequences
  • Temperance keeps us in balance for how far we can act upon our desires
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13
Q

Quote St Ambrose on Natural Law

A

“natural law is in the heart… All men are under the natural law”

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14
Q

What is the Telos for Aquinas?

A
  • The universe is purposive (Aristotle and Aquinas)
  • Aristotle treats this as eudaimonia - true happiness and flourishing
  • For Aquinas we are fulfilled only when we are most complete and at our best with God
  • We must live this life in faithful service of God by the light of reason
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15
Q

Quote Thomas Hobbes on “ius”

A

“law and right differ as much, as obligation and liberty” - He makes the distinction between Ius and Lex and recognises Natural Law should be understood as Ius

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16
Q

What are the 5 primary precepts for Aquinas?

A

1) Preservation of life
2) Ordering of society
3) worship of God
4) Education of children
5) Reproduction
These show our natural inclination to do good and we need to cultivate these virtues in order to flourish

17
Q

What are secondary precepts for Aquinas?

A
  • Secondary precepts are precepts which allow us to rationally fulfil the primary precepts
18
Q

Quote Aquinas on the primary precepts

A

“For there is in man a primary and natural inclination to do good”

19
Q

What is Prudence? (Quote Aquinas)

A
  • ‘wisdom in looking ahead’, the practical application of reason
  • We are rational creatures able to direct our behaviour through thinking, not gut feeling at all times
  • “Prudence entails not only consideration of the reason but also the application to action, which is the goal of practical reason”
20
Q

What 3 intellectual skills does Prudence entail?

A

Understanding, judgement and good deliberation

21
Q

What is John Finnis’ modern development on Natural Law?

A
  • Aristotelian principles, ‘basic forms of human flourishing’ , e.g life, knowledge, work, aesthetic experience, friendship, practical reasonableness and religion
  • Aspect of ourselves has rights
  • Argues for human nature as she is, not purposive
22
Q

What are the ‘basic methodological requirements’ for Finnis?

A
  • pursuit of goods
  • a coherent plan of life
  • no arbitrary preferences among values, detachment and commitment
  • the (limited) relevance of consequences
  • respect for every basic value in every act, common good
  • following ones conscience
23
Q

How does Finnis define justice?

A
  • In terms of promoting the common good

- common good is defined as people realising their own basic values as well as other personal objectives

24
Q

What are the absolute duties, absolute rights for Finnis?

A
  • rights not to be tortured
  • not to have one’s life taken as a means to another end
  • not to be lied to when factual communication is proper and expected
  • not to be condemned on known false charges
    Natural rights are a logical follow-on from natural law
25
Q

Quote Aquinas on the principle of double effect and expand

A

“Moral acts take their character from what is intended, not from what is outside the intention”

  • things may have two known effects, however we must consider both intentions and results of an action
  • The actions reason also must be evaluated
26
Q

What are the 4 conditions for the principle of double effect?

A

1) The act must not be evil in itself, e.g killing is not but murder is (wrongful killing)
2) The evil and good that come from the act must be at least equal, preferably the good must outweigh the evil
3) The intention of the agent must be good. The agent must not want to bring about an evil result
4) A proportionally serious reason must be present to justify allowing the indirect bad effect

27
Q

Quote Anthony Kenny on the principle of double effect

A

“there is nothing wrong with appointing the best person for the job… very different matter if you appointed A (even though best candidate) for the express purpose of giving pain to B”

  • Recognises the theory can work in practice and exemplifies the importance of intention behind the action.
28
Q

Quote Cicero on Natural Law

A
  • “(natural) law is right reason in agreement with Nature”
  • Cicero says that understanding is promulgated by God.
  • However it is feasible to suggest right reason can be worked out without reference to God
29
Q

What is the manuals view on Natural Law? Quote Servais Pinckaers

A
  • Argued that natural law theory was absolutist and deontological
  • “the manuals lost sight of the essential question:… happiness and destiny”
  • Manuals read law books which discussed moral requirements as fixed laws
30
Q

What is the name of the concept of the 4 laws used by Aquinas?

A

The concept of a fourfold division

31
Q

What is the Key Precept?

A

Synderesis = Do good and avoid evil