Natural Law - The Scientific Ways of Treating Natural Law, Its Place in
Moral Philosophy, and Its Relation to the Positive Sciences of Law
Book description
One of the central problems in the history of moral and political
philosophy since antiquity has been to explain how human society and
its civil institutions came into being. In attempting to solve this
problem philosophers developed the idea of natural law, which for many
centuries was used to describe the system of fundamental, rational
principles presumed universally to govern human behavior in society.
By the eighteenth century the doctrine of natural law had engendered
the related doctrine of natural rights, which gained reinforcement
most famously in the American and French revolutions. According to
this view, human society arose through the association of individuals
who might have chosen to live alone in scattered isolation and who, in
coming together, were regarded as entering into a social contract.
In this important early essay, first published in English in
this definitive translation in 1975 and now returned to print, Hegel
utterly rejects the notion that society is purposely formed by
voluntary association. Indeed, he goes further than this, asserting in
effect that the laws brought about in various countries in response to
force, accident, and deliberation are far more fundamental than any
law of nature supposed to be valid always and everywhere. In
expounding his view Hegel not only dispenses with the empiricist
explanations of Hobbes, Hume, and others but also, at the heart of
this work, offers an extended critique of the so-called formalist
positions of Kant and Fichte.
"With the appearance of this book the English-speaking world
will learn something at first hand of the genesis of Hegel's ideas,
the dominant intellectual themes of his youth, and the struggle of his
penetrating, comprehensive mind to achieve clarity."-The
Philosophical Review
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) was perhaps the most
systematic of the post-Kantian idealist German philosophers. T. M. Knox
translated many of Hegel's works into English. Harry Burrows Acton
(1908-1974) was a British academic philosopher known for defending the
morality of capitalism. John R. Silber was president of Boston
University from 1971 until 1996.