Calvin’s natural law theory is premised on the sovereignty of God. In natural law terms, the ‘sovereignty of God’ doctrine prescribes that the normative standards for positive law originate from God alone. God is the sole measure of the ‘good’. This emphasis allows for a sharp separation between normative and descriptive dimensions. In this context, it would be a logical fallacy to maintain that anything humanly appointed can attain the status of selfevidence. However, in recent years, new natural law theorists have been guilty of conflating the normative and descriptive dimensions – a distinction that is critical to the discipline of natural law. This may stretch as far back to Aquinas who set human participation in the goods (‘practical r...
For as long as there has been human morality, questions have risen about “natural law,” What is it? ...
The natural law tradition is not monolithic but pluralistic. For proponents of natural law theory ha...
The new natural law theory of John Finnis and others is an ambitious but flawed reinterpretation of ...
Constance Lee’s chapter considers the possibility of retrieving a natural law theory from the theolo...
Review of background and application of the notion of natural law by magisterial reformer John Calvi...
This dissertation seeks to answer, by close reading of primary texts, the question of whether John C...
John Calvin (1509–64), a central figure in Reformed theology, is perhaps best known for his bleak do...
Something like natural law is required if Christians are to say that Jesus Christ is as relevant to ...
Is knowledge of right and wrong written on the human heart? Do people know God from the world around...
In this chapter, I examine Kelsen’s contention that the natural law doctrine necessarily depends on ...
In this chapter, I examine Kelsen’s contention that the natural law doctrine necessarily depends on ...
The term ‘natural law’ has historically led to a great deal of confusion. This is partly due to the ...
In early modern moral and political philosophy, the term “natural law” referred to a universal moral...
This paper argues that the Christian conception of Natural law is indispensable for the understandin...
For much of the 20th century, natural law discourse has centred upon the primacy of human reason. Co...
For as long as there has been human morality, questions have risen about “natural law,” What is it? ...
The natural law tradition is not monolithic but pluralistic. For proponents of natural law theory ha...
The new natural law theory of John Finnis and others is an ambitious but flawed reinterpretation of ...
Constance Lee’s chapter considers the possibility of retrieving a natural law theory from the theolo...
Review of background and application of the notion of natural law by magisterial reformer John Calvi...
This dissertation seeks to answer, by close reading of primary texts, the question of whether John C...
John Calvin (1509–64), a central figure in Reformed theology, is perhaps best known for his bleak do...
Something like natural law is required if Christians are to say that Jesus Christ is as relevant to ...
Is knowledge of right and wrong written on the human heart? Do people know God from the world around...
In this chapter, I examine Kelsen’s contention that the natural law doctrine necessarily depends on ...
In this chapter, I examine Kelsen’s contention that the natural law doctrine necessarily depends on ...
The term ‘natural law’ has historically led to a great deal of confusion. This is partly due to the ...
In early modern moral and political philosophy, the term “natural law” referred to a universal moral...
This paper argues that the Christian conception of Natural law is indispensable for the understandin...
For much of the 20th century, natural law discourse has centred upon the primacy of human reason. Co...
For as long as there has been human morality, questions have risen about “natural law,” What is it? ...
The natural law tradition is not monolithic but pluralistic. For proponents of natural law theory ha...
The new natural law theory of John Finnis and others is an ambitious but flawed reinterpretation of ...