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NEW DIRECTIONS IN NATURAL LAW
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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2017
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Notoriously, natural law means many things to many people. Natural law is discussed quite differently in the fields of ethics, law, and theology; it is employed quite differently in the spheres of political rhetoric, churches, and academia; it has been used quite differently in the eras of ancient Rome, medieval Europe, the Enlightenment, and the postmodern West; and something akin to natural law appears, with quite different associations, in the religious traditions of Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and Hinduism. In some contexts natural law refers to God's moral law. In other contexts natural law consists of norms that can be discerned solely through human reason. In still other contexts natural law describes rules that are naturally embedded in the physical world.
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References
1 I am ignoring the second-order normativity involved in the claim that one ought to obey the law, in the traffic-light case.
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4 George has served on the United States Commission on Civil Rights, the President's Council on Bioethics, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, and as a Judicial Fellow of the Supreme Court of the United States, among other positions.
5 Also closely aligned with the position of Finnis and George is the work of Catholic theologian Germain Grisez. For Grisez's comprehensive statement on moral theology, see his The Way of the Lord Jesus, 3 vols. (Chicago: Franciscan Herald Press, 1983–1987).
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25 “[A]ction, which is rooted in the body, is always already oriented to the meaning that is inscribed in human nature by the Creator. It finds its beginning in passion, which is precisely that reaction which reveals to man the possibility of a new and greater fullness that freedom is called on to acknowledge and embrace in the light of reason” (Melina, Searching for a Universal Ethic, 299).
26 Most notably, Anver Emon argues that the International Theological Commission is particularly careless in its treatment of Islam because it points to the Mu‛tazilite theological school to demonstrate the Islamic interest in natural law, but the Mu‛tazilite school is now generally considered heterodox (Emon, Searching for a Universal Ethic, 128–29).
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