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Human Rights and Common Good - Collected Essays Volume III (Paperback)
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Human Rights and Common Good - Collected Essays Volume III (Paperback)
Series: Collected Essays of John Finnis
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This central volume in the Collected Essays brings together John
Finnis's wide-ranging contribution to central issues in political
philosophy. The volume begins by examining the general theory of
political community and social justice. It includes the powerful
and well-known Maccabaean Lecture on Bills of Rights - a searching
critique of Ronald Dworkin's moral-political arguments and
conclusions, of the European Court of Human Rights' approach to
fundamental rights, and of judicial review as a constitutional
institution. It is followed by an equally searching analysis of
Kant's thought on the intersection of law, right, and ethics. Other
papers in the book's opening section include an early assessment of
Rawls's A Theory of Justice, a radical re-interpretation of Aquinas
on limited government and the significance of the private/public
distinction, and a challenging paper on virtue and the
constitution. The volume then focuses on central problems in modern
political communities, including the achievement of justice in work
and distribution; the practice of punishment; war and justice; the
public control of euthanasia and abortion; and the nature of
marriage and the common good. There are careful and vigorous
critiques of Nietzsche on morality, Hart on punishment, Dworkin on
the enforcement of morality and on euthanasia, Rawls on justice and
law, Thomson on the woman's right to choose, Habermas on abortion,
Nussbaum and Koppelman on same-sex relations, and Dummett and
Weithman on open borders. The volume's previously unpublished
papers include a foundational consideration of labour unions, a
fresh statement of a new grounding for the morality of sex, a
surprising reading of C.S. Lewis's Abolition of Man on
contraception, and an introduction reviewing some of the remarkable
changes in private and public morality over the past half-century.
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