Origins of the Natural Law Tradition
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“In selecting the four theories of Natural Law it was thought advisable to explore only concepts of Natural Law as a manifestation of universal order, leaving for the future the subsidiary notions of Natural Rights developed in more recent centuries. The four theories have been presented in terms of their principal expositors: Cicero, with his transcending synthesis of the Aristotelian man and the Stoic cosmology; St. Thomas Aquinas, with his Hellenized adaptation of traditional Jewish-Christian theology; Richard Hooker, who provided an intellectual bridge between the neoclassical Natural Law of Bracton, of John of Salisbury, and of Anglican theology, and the rationalist Natural Rights doctrines of the seventeenth century; and Herbert Spencer, who constructed a sort of Natural Law on the basis of the natural laws of biological existence as propounded by Charles Darwin.” (From the Introduction by Arthur L. Harding)
Robert N. Wilkin
Robert Wilkin (Ph.D., Dallas Theological Seminary) was born and raised in Southern California. After graduating from college he joined the staff of Campus Crusade for Christ, serving two years each at Arkansas State University and North Carolina State University. During his seminary studies Bob served in a variety of ministries including a year each in college and high school ministry, a year as a hospital chaplain, and three years as a pastor. After receiving his doctorate, Bob taught at Woodcrest College in Lindale, Texas and then at Multnomah Bible College in Portland, Oregon. Feeling that there was a great need for an educational and networking organization for Christians who believe in the freeness of the Gospel, Bob started Grace Evangelical Society in June of 1986. In July of 1987 he left his teaching position to devote full time to heading up this ministry. Since its inception, readership of the bimonthly newsletter, Grace In Focus, has grown from 30 to over 9,500 in 54 countries. Dr. Wilkin has written three books, Confident in Christ, The Road to Reward, and Secure and Sure, as well as two booklets, and hundreds of newsletter and journal articles. Bob and his wife Sharon live in Lewisville, Texas.
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Origins of the Natural Law Tradition - Robert N. Wilkin
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ORIGINS OF THE NATURAL LAW TRADITION
BY
ROBERT N. WILKIN
JOHN S. MARSHALL
THOMAS E. DAVITT, S.J.
ARTHUR L. HARDING
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 2
INTRODUCTION 3
CICERO AND THE LAW OF NATURE—Robert N. Wilkin 5
ST. THOMAS AQUINAS AND THE NATURAL LAW—Thomas E. Davitt 18
RICHARD HOOKER AND THE ORIGINS OF AMERICAN CONSTITUTIONALISM—John S. Marshall 30
THE GHOST OF HERBERT SPENCER: A DARWINIAN CONCEPT OF LAW—Arthur L. Harding 41
EPILOGUE 53
INTRODUCTION
CONCEPTS of a Law of Nature are as old as Western philosophy. From its inception Greek philosophy was concerned to reduce the apparent chaos and conflict of the visible world to some principle of harmony and order. The true relationship of man to the world about him was of primary concern. Philosophical solutions of these problems were found in concepts of Natural Law by which men could be brought into an ideal relationship with each other and with their environment.
Concepts of Natural Law are almost as varied as are the philosophical systems which have been evolved in the history of Western civilization. Each in turn has wrestled with the seemingly insoluble problem of the ideal society and its position in the cosmos. Some solutions have been essentially religious in nature; others have rested upon magnificent cosmologies. Some have sought the answer in comparative anthropology, the development of legal institutions in rudimentary and primitive societies; others in a jus gentium, the common legal experiences of contemporary societies. Still others have probed the mysteries of the physical universe via the natural sciences. In any event, the search continues.
The annual conferences on Law in Society, conducted by the Southern Methodist University School of Law and the Southwestern Legal Foundation, are devoted to the study of the relationship of legal doctrines and institutions to social institutions; the effect of social beliefs and needs and institutions upon the formulation of law, and the effect of legal doctrines and their administration upon the society. The accomplishment of such a task requires a re-examination of the Natural Law doctrine. For this there are several reasons.
In the first place, the persistence of the notion of Natural Law supports a possible inference of its validity, however questionable may be some of the methods employed and some of the contents developed. So far as the concept has validity, it must be considered in any contemporary legal doctrine. Secondly, a good deal of our existing legal doctrine can be explained historically only in the light of Natural Law doctrines which have prevailed in times past. In the third place, the average American believes strongly that there is such a thing as Natural Law and that he has natural rights. So long as laws are made by men and administered by men, this belief, ill-founded or no, is a sociological fact which the jurist must take into account. Finally, no legal theory, and no study of legal institutions today, can be confined to the territory of a particular sovereign; the law of other countries and the Law of Nations must be taken into account. Natural Law doctrines may offer means of rapprochement to the positive law of other countries. The Law of Nations, wanting a sovereign and a command theory of law, traditionally has abounded in Natural Law learning.
In studying Natural Law one must begin with definitions. The outstanding characteristic of most contemporary discussions of the subject is that there are about as many definitions and concepts represented as there are participants. Often the discussion is concluded without agreement even on fundamental terms. Accordingly this, the 1953 Conference on Law in Society, was devoted to definition, to outlining four different ideas of Natural Law which have bulked large in our legal history. The four concepts presented do not cover even the major ones, but they are a beginning. Subsequent conferences will pursue the inquiry further.
In selecting the four theories of Natural Law it was thought advisable to explore only concepts of Natural Law as a manifestation of universal order, leaving for the future the subsidiary notions of Natural Rights developed in more recent centuries. The four theories have been presented in terms of their principal expositors: Cicero, with his transcending synthesis of the Aristotelian man and the Stoic cosmology; St. Thomas Aquinas, with his Hellenized adaptation of traditional Jewish-Christian theology; Richard Hooker, who provided an intellectual bridge between the neoclassical Natural Law of Bracton, of John of Salisbury, and of Anglican theology, and the rationalist Natural Rights doctrines of the seventeenth century; and Herbert Spencer, who constructed a sort of Natural Law on the basis of the natural laws of biological existence as propounded by Charles Darwin.
The University is in great debt to the speakers who participated in the 1953 Conference. Judge Wilkin is a lifelong student of Roman history and legal philosophy, and is the author of Eternal Lawyer: A Legal Biography of Cicero. Father Davitt is trained in psychology and law and is the author of The Nature of Law, an analysis of the conflict of Will versus Reason in medieval legal thinking. Professor Marshall is an authority upon Anglican church history and doctrine and English philosophy of the Tudor period. He has performed a valuable service in publishing an edition of the major parts of Hooker’s Ecclesiastical Polity rendered in modern English.
Mr. Dwight L. Simmons of the Dallas Bar, long a student of legal philosophy, contributed greatly to the success of the Conference, not only by financial support but also by participation in the program.
ARTHUR L. HARDING
The School of Law
Southern Methodist University
CICERO AND THE LAW OF NATURE—Robert N. Wilkin
THE conditions today which cause a revival of interest in Natural Law are the same conditions that inspired the Greeks to perceive and formulate the principles of Natural Law as part of their philosophy during the fourth century B.C.{1} Similar conditions prompted the Romans to make Natural Law the basis of their jurisprudence during the last century of the Republic. The same general conditions made it necessary for the Scholastic philosophers to base their theory of the state on Natural Law when Europe was emerging from the anarchy of the Dark Ages. Similar conditions impelled the Founding Fathers of our country to make Natural Law the cornerstone of the constitutional government which they established.{2}
The conditions that existed at each of these periods of history were the conditions that always confront mankind at a time of great political transition. Whenever military or commercial expansion or political evolution makes the old, customary, local government insufficient for the needs of the time and creates a necessity for a new form of government which can rule over different localities, different nations, and different races, then men are compelled to search for the true principles of law and order. Because they prefer rational government to arbitrary power and lawful order to strife and violence, men are impelled to consider human nature and try to discover those principles of individual and social life which are not arbitrary, local, or temporal, but rational, universal, and eternal-and that effort leads to Natural Law.
Cicero and the Republic
Coming now to the specific subject of this discussion—Origins of the Natural Law Tradition-it is well that the men who made the program for this Conference had it begin with a study of the