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Natural Law Modernized

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Natural Law Modernized
Toronto Studies in Philosophy

David Braybrooke
University of Toronto Press © 2001

Cloth: Oct 27 2001 Active/Available
Paper: Jul 3 2003 Active/Available

World Rights
351pp /
Volume


Hobbes, Locke, Hume, and Rousseau are classic modern philosophers, widely consulted in matters of ethics and political theory. In this provocative study David Braybrooke challenges received scholarly opinion by arguing that these canonical theorists took St Thomas Aquinas as their point of reference, reinforcing rather than departing from his natural law theory.

The natural law theory of St Thomas Aquinas is essentially a secular theory, says Braybrooke. He argues that Hobbes, Locke, Hume, and Rousseau share a core of thought that not only has roots in St Thomas but offers an alternative to other ethical theories now current. According to Braybrooke, this surviving and reinforced core qualifies as an ethical theory viable by the most sophisticated standards, meeting the main challenges of analytical metaethics, and thus standing up to the scrutiny that any ethical theory must undergo in contemporary philosophical discussions.

Braybrooke's study takes the reader into a rich and compelling intellectual universe, one in which medieval natural law theory, widely ignored as obsolete, survives robustly through the modern canon and into the third millennium.

DAVID BRAYBROOKE is a professor emeritus in the department of philosophy at Dalhousie University and holds the Centennial Commission Chair in the Liberal Arts at the University of Texas at Austin.



Endorsements/Review Excerpts

'A fine example of what happens when a brilliant mind finds a rich vein of enquiry to explore.'

-Richard Vernon, Professor of Political Science, University of Western Ontario-

'[Natural Law Modernized] is provocative in the good sense, and challenging to many of our commonly held notions about natural law discussions. This book is creative, substantive, offers some quite new and often exciting twists in reading modern moral theory ... [It] will be received with some interest by the philosophical community.'

-Anthony J. Lisska, Professor of Philosophy, Denison University-

'This is an interesting contribution to our understanding of the history of natural law theory ... It is refreshing to see someone who writes about the history of political thought in a "continuist" rather than "discontinuist" manner.'

-Tony Burns-Political Studies

'This is an important contribution to natural law studies.'

-J.E. Finn-Choice Magazine



University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial support for its publishing activities of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).

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