Natural Law
Natural Law –
What is Law?
Natural Law is
a broad and often misapplied term tossed around various schools of philosophy,
science, history, theology, and law. Indeed, Immanuel Kant reminded us, 'What
is law?' may be said to be about as embarrassing to the jurist as the well-know
question ‘What is Truth?’ is to the logician.
- Law, in its
generic sense, is a body of rules of action or conduct prescribed by
controlling authority, and having binding legal force. That which must be
obeyed and followed by citizens subject to sanctions or legal consequences
is a law (Black’s Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition, p. 884).
- Jurisprudence is
the philosophy of law and how the law developed.
Natural Law – A
Moral Theory of Jurisprudence
Natural Law is
a moral theory of jurisprudence, which maintains that law should be based on
morality and ethics. Natural Law holds that the law is based on what’s
“correct.” Natural Law is “discovered” by humans through the use of reason and
choosing between good and evil. Therefore, Natural Law finds its power in
discovering certain universal standards in morality and ethics.
Natural Law –
The History
The Greeks --
Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle emphasized the distinction between
"nature" (physis, φъσις) and "law,"
"custom," or "convention" (nomos, νуμος). What
the law commanded varied from place to place, but what was "by
nature" should be the same everywhere. Aristotle (BC 384—322) is
considered by many to be the father of “natural law.” In Rhetoric, he
argues that aside from “particular” laws that each people has set up for
itself, there is a “common law” or “higher law” that is according to nature (Rhetoric 1373b2–8).
The Stoics -- The development of natural law theory continued in the Hellenistic school of philosophy, particularly with the Stoics. The Stoics pointed to the existence of a rational and purposeful order to the universe. The means by which a rational being lived in accordance with this cosmic order was considered natural law. Unlike Aristotle’s “higher law,” Stoic natural law was indifferent to the divine or natural source of that law. Stoic philosophy was very influential with Roman jurists such as Cicero, thus playing a significant role in the development of Roman legal theory.
The Christians -- Augustine (AD 354—430) equates natural law with man's Pre-Fall state. Therefore, life according to nature is no longer possible and mankind must instead seek salvation through the divine law and Christ’s grace. Gratian (12th century) reconnected the concept of natural law and divine law. “The Human Race is ruled by two things: namely, natural law and usages (mos, moris, mores). Natural law is what is contained in the law and the Gospel. By it, each person is commanded to do to others what he wants done to himself and is prohibited from inflicting on others what he does not want done to himself.” (Decretum, D.1 d.a.c.1; ca. 1140 AD)
The Stoics -- The development of natural law theory continued in the Hellenistic school of philosophy, particularly with the Stoics. The Stoics pointed to the existence of a rational and purposeful order to the universe. The means by which a rational being lived in accordance with this cosmic order was considered natural law. Unlike Aristotle’s “higher law,” Stoic natural law was indifferent to the divine or natural source of that law. Stoic philosophy was very influential with Roman jurists such as Cicero, thus playing a significant role in the development of Roman legal theory.
The Christians -- Augustine (AD 354—430) equates natural law with man's Pre-Fall state. Therefore, life according to nature is no longer possible and mankind must instead seek salvation through the divine law and Christ’s grace. Gratian (12th century) reconnected the concept of natural law and divine law. “The Human Race is ruled by two things: namely, natural law and usages (mos, moris, mores). Natural law is what is contained in the law and the Gospel. By it, each person is commanded to do to others what he wants done to himself and is prohibited from inflicting on others what he does not want done to himself.” (Decretum, D.1 d.a.c.1; ca. 1140 AD)
1. Two Kinds
of Natural Law Theory
At the
outset, it is important to distinguish two kinds of theory that go by the name
of natural law. The first is a theory of morality that is roughly characterized
by the following theses. First, moral propositions have what is sometimes
called objective standing in the sense that such propositions are the bearers
of objective truth-value; that is, moral propositions can be objectively true
or false. Though moral objectivism is sometimes equated with moral realism
(see, e.g., Moore 1992, 190: "the truth of any moral proposition lies in
its correspondence with a mind- and convention-independent moral
reality"), the relationship between the two theories is controversial.
Geoffrey Sayre-McCord (1988), for example, views moral objectivism as one
species of moral realism, but not the only form; on Sayre-McCord's view, moral
subjectivism and moral intersubjectivism are also forms of moral realism.
Strictly speaking, then, natural law moral theory is committed only to the
objectivity of moral norms.
2.
Conceptual Naturalism
a. The
Project of Conceptual Jurisprudence
The
principal objective of conceptual (or analytic) jurisprudence has traditionally
been to provide an account of what distinguishes law as a system of norms from
other systems of norms, such as ethical norms. As John Austin describes the
project, conceptual jurisprudence seeks "the essence or nature which is
common to all laws that are properly so called" (Austin 1995, 11).
Accordingly, the task of conceptual jurisprudence is to provide a set of
necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of law that distinguishes
law from non-law in every possible world.
b. Classical
Natural Law Theory
All
forms of natural law theory subscribe to the Overlap Thesis, which asserts that
there is some kind of non-conventional relation between law and morality.
According to this view, then, the notion of law cannot be fully articulated
without some reference to moral notions. Though the Overlap Thesis may seem
unambiguous, there are a number of different ways in which it can be
interpreted.
Natural Law –
The Conclusion
In the end,
where does law come from? The Theory of Natural Law maintains that certain
moral laws transcend time, culture, and government. There are universal
standards that apply to all mankind throughout all time. These universal moral
standards are inherent in and discoverable by all of us, and form the basis of
a just society.
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