Accounts of natural law moral philosophy and theology sought
principles and precepts for morality, law, and other forms of
social authority, whose prescriptive force was not dependent for
validity on human decision, social influence, past tradition, or
cultural convention, but through natural reason itself.
This volume critically explores and assesses our contemporary
culture wars in terms of: the possibility of natural law moral
philosophy and theology to provide a unique, content-full,
canonical morality; the character and nature of moral pluralism;
the limits of justifiable national and international policy seeking
to produce and preserve human happiness, social justice, and the
common good; the ways in which morality, moral epistemology, and
social political reform must be set within the broader context of
an appropriately philosophically and theologically anchored
anthropology. This work will be of interest to philosophers,
theologians, bioethicists, ethicists and political scientists.
General
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