FRASER The Essential Natural Law
FRASER The Essential Natural Law
FRASER The Essential Natural Law
NATURAL LAW
Samuel Gregg
Fraser Institute d www.fraserinstitute.org
The Essential
Natural Law
by Samuel Gregg
Fraser Institute
www.fraserinstitute.org
2021
Copyright © 2021 by the Fraser Institute. All rights reserved. No part of this book
may be reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in
the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
The author of this publication has worked independently and opinions expressed by
him are, therefore, his own, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Fraser
Institute or its supporters, directors, or staff. This publication in no way implies that
the Fraser Institute, its directors, or staff are in favour of, or oppose the passage of,
any bill; or that they support or oppose any particular political party or candidate.
Cover artwork
Leslie Lightheart
ISBN 978-0-88975-660-1ø
Contents
Notes on Texts Used / vii
Introduction / 1
6 Conclusion / 65
Works Cited / 69
Publishing information / 79
About the author / 80
Publisher’s acknowledgments / 80
Supporting the Fraser Institute / 81
Purpose, funding, and independence / 81
About the Fraser Institute / 82
Editorial Advisory Board / 83
Fraser Institute d www.fraserinstitute.org
Note on Texts Used
Below is a list of abbreviations and notations that I use when referring to vari-
ous texts. Where possible, I also use a standardized notation so that readers
can find the relevant passages in other editions of the work.
“ST I-II q.94, a.2” means “Thomas Aquinas (1265-1273), Summa Theologiae,
First part of the Second Part, Question 94, Article 2 of the T. Gilby, ed. (1963),
Blackfriars edition.”
“Albornóz, 1573: VII, 29” means Bartolomé de Albornóz (1573), Arte de los
Contratos, Biblioteca de la Universidad de Sevilla, Book 7, Chapter 29 of the
edition cited.
“Brown Scott, 1934: bk.2, q.2, a.1” means James Brown Scott (1934), The Spanish
Origin of International Law: Francisco de Vitoria and His Law of Nations,
Clarendon Press, Book 2, Question 2, Answer 1 of the edition cited.
“de Soto, 1553-1554/1968: VI, q.II, a.2” means Domingo de Soto (1553-
1554/1968), De Iustitia et Iure, IEP, Book VI, Question II, Answer 2 of the edi-
tion cited.
“Grotius, 1609/2004: I, 218” means Hugo Grotius (1609), The Free Sea. Richard
Hakluyt, tr., with William Welwod’s Critique and Grotius’s Reply, David Armitage,
ed. (2004), Liberty Fund, Book I, page 218 of the edition cited.
“Lessius, 1606/2020: IV lib. 2, cap. 21, dub. 20” means Leonardus Lessius (1606),
De iustitia et iure caeterisque virtutibus cardinalibus, Thomas Duve et al., eds.
(2020), Frommann-Holzboog, Part IV, Book 2, Chapter 21, Dubium 20 of the
edition cited.
“Pufendorf, 1672/1998: bk.II, ch.III, 23” means Samuel von Pufendorf (1672),
De Jure Naturae et Gentium Libri Octo, Frank Böhling, ed. (1998), Akademie
Verlag, Book II, Chapter II, page 23 of the edition cited.
“Suárez, c.1612/2012a: II, 20, 1” means Francisco Suárez (c. 1612), Tractatus
De Legibus Ac Deo Legislatore, Ulan Press (2012), Book II, Chapter 20, page 1
of the edition cited.
“Suárez, c.1612/2012b: II, 19, 8” means Francisco Suárez (c. 1612), De opere sex
dierum, Nabu Press (2012), Book II, Chapter 19, page 8 of the edition cited.
“Vattel, 1758/2008: bk.2, ch.2, s. 25” means Emer de Vattel (1758), The Law of
Nations, Béla Kapossy and Richard Whatmore, eds. (2008), Liberty Fund, Book
2, Chapter 2, section 25 of the edition cited.
“Vitoria, 1557/1917: rel. I, sect III” means Francisco de Vitoria (1557), De indis
et iure belli relectiones, Ernest Nys, ed. (1917), The Carnegie Institution of
Washington, Relatio I, Section III of the edition cited.
Few ideas have been as influential in the development of moral, political, legal,
and economic thought in the broad Western tradition as the idea of natural
law. It is also true that the understanding of natural law and its influence on
specific norms and institutions—rights, justice, private property, rule of law,
limited government, etc.—is not anywhere near as widespread in the twenty-
first century as it was just 100 years ago.
Today you can study for a law degree without receiving any real expo-
sure to the classical, medieval, early modern, and contemporary natural law
thinkers whose writings form an essential backdrop to the functioning of legal
institutions, ranging from contracts to international law (Helmhotz, 2015).
The purpose of this short book is to help rectify this deficit by explaining the
basic principles of natural law and highlighting significant contributions that
key natural law scholars have made to ideas and concepts that have encour-
aged the growth of free societies.
Like any tradition of thought, some natural law thinkers devote more
attention to specific areas of inquiry than others. Some focus on natural law’s
applicability to legal theory. Others are more interested what natural law prin-
ciples tells us about the proper ordering of politics. Yet others concentrate on
the relationship between natural law and economic questions.
While this book seeks to introduce readers to how natural law thinkers
have contributed to the enhancement of freedom in the political, legal, and
economic realms, we will focus on some of these scholars more than others.
The most important of these is Thomas Aquinas.
Thomas Aquinas
Aquinas’s name is inseparable from natural law philosophy, not least because
his writings are widely acknowledged as having given decisive form to nat-
ural law ethics, reasoning, and political and legal theory. Born in 1225 in
southern Italy, Aquinas was educated at the famous Benedictine abbey at
Monte Cassino. Instead of becoming a Benedictine monk, Aquinas joined
the recently formed Dominican order which was already in the process of
becoming a formidable intellectual force in medieval Europe.
In 1245, Aquinas was sent to study theology at the University of Paris.
This is where he most likely met his teacher (another Dominican), the natural
scientist, philosopher, and theologian Albertus Magnus (c. 1200–1280). Three
years later, Aquinas accompanied Albertus Magnus to Cologne, where he
wrote extensively about Scripture, before being sent back to Paris for further
studies in theology in 1252. Over the next four years, Aquinas penned lengthy
commentaries on the writings of the prominent theologian and bishop of
Paris, Peter Lombard. In 1256, Aquinas was appointed regent master in theol-
ogy (the equivalent of a teaching professor) at the University of Paris, where he
wrote works on topics ranging from metaphysics to internal Church disputes.
Between 1259 and 1268, Aquinas was back in Italy where he taught in
Naples, Orveito, and Rome. It was at the last of these locations that he began
to compose his most famous and important work: the Summa Theologiae,
a manual for instruction in all the teachings of Catholicism for seminary
students beginning their studies as well as lay people interested in theology.
Manuals like the Summa deployed a particular style of argumentation
that was used by many natural law thinkers before and after Aquinas. What
became known as the scholastic method involved engaging in the rational
(c.470–399 BC), and Aristotle (c.384–322 BC), and those of Rome, like
Cicero (c.106–43 BC), and master-thinkers of the later Roman Empire such
as the Catholic bishop Augustine (354–430). But Aquinas also included the
post-imperial philosopher and Roman politician Boethius (477–524); elev-
enth century Persian minds like Ibn Sina (970–1037); Muslim thinkers such
as Ibn Rushd (1126–1198); and medieval Jewish scholars like Maimonides
(1138–1204). In other words, Aquinas was part of a trans-historical reflection
about the character of good and evil, justice, property, liberty, government,
and reason itself.
This brings me to my second point about Aquinas. During one of
his periods of teaching in Paris, one of Aquinas’s students asked him: how
does one settle disputed questions? Does one appeal to reason or authority?
Aquinas’s answer is long but instructive:
indeed told that such-and-such is so, but gain nothing in the way
of knowledge or understanding [scientiae vel intellectus] and go
away empty. (Aquinas, 1256-1259; 1269-1272, Quaestiones de
Quolibet Quodlibetal IV, q.9 a3c, in Busa, 1996)
important distinctions between those rights that are enforceable by the state
and those that are not. Building on thinkers like Suárez, these commentators
devoted particular attention to international relations. For them, issues like
whether a state could inhibit its members from trading with people subject
to another sovereignty needed to be resolved on grounds of natural law and,
as a derivative of natural law, the idea of natural rights.
It’s important to note that while natural law scholars used natural
rights phraseology, these rights were seen as grounded in natural law rather
than being self-sufficient claims that required no further justification. In other
words, natural rights derived their moral, legal, and political force from giving
effect to requirements of natural law. Absent that foundation, natural rights
would be understood simply as assertions of will and thus having little to do
with reason.
that individual rights should be identified and political and legal institutions
designed “without employing any particular conception of the good life or of
what gives value to life” (Dworkin, 1985: 350).
If, however, rights are detached from moral norms—such as the
wrongness and injustice of coercing people to adopt particular political or
religious views, or the wrongness of individuals or the state arbitrarily con-
fiscating people’s property—the binding character of rights becomes far less
obvious and more susceptible to significant qualification (if not emptying out)
by the state. To varying degrees and in different ways, twentieth century natu-
ral law scholars sought to rearticulate ideas of natural law that could respond
to these multi-level and interrelated challenges. In doing so, they introduced
important clarifications to natural law accounts of justice, rights, rule of law,
and limited government that could be seen as enhancing the freedom of indi-
viduals and communities.
Two caveats
Before going another further, I must make two caveats. The first is that natu-
ral law thinkers do not agree about everything. They may hold to the same
basic principles of reasoning, but nevertheless, they often arrive at different
conclusions about how to order things. Natural law tells us, for instance, that
constitutional arrangements do need to limit power if individuals and com-
munities are to be free from unreasonable coercion and able to make the type
of free choices that allow them to do good and avoid evil. But natural law
does not immediately tell us whether the different ways in which Russia’s or
America’s constitutional arrangements configure, say, the separation of pow-
ers between an executive, judiciary, and legislature are inherently superior to
those of Australia, Canada, or France.
The second caveat concerns how to situate natural law theory on the
political spectrum. Strictly-speaking, natural law is concerned with what it is
reasonable; and by reasonable, we are speaking of what it is right and good for
individuals and communities to freely choose. Natural law is not concerned
with assessing whether a position is conservative, classical liberal, modern
liberal, social democrat, etc. Many positions associated with natural law may
cohere with what are usually regarded as “conservative” positions. In other
cases, conclusions derived from natural law may been understood as having
more in common with more “classical liberal” views.1 From this standpoint,
natural law theory does not fit neatly into categories like conservative-versus-
progressive, liberal-versus-traditionalist, or even secularist-versus-religious.
With these cautions in mind, let us turn to defining what natural law
is—and isn’t.
1 By “conservatism,” I mean those schools of thought that emphasize the importance of tradition
as a repository of wisdom, skepticism of radical change, and attention to human imperfectability.
By “classical liberalism,” I mean those thinkers who stress the importance of liberty from unjust
coercion, a state limited to key functions like national security and rule of law, strong limits on
government power, and minimal state intervention in the economy. Many contemporary center-
right intellectuals draw on both conservative and classical liberal sources.
Perhaps the most confusing aspect of natural law is the phrase itself: “natu-
ral law.” For many people, the word “natural” implies human biology or the
physical environment. For others, it means “instinct.” Likewise, when some
people hear the word “law,” it implies “constraint” or obedience to legislation,
regulations, and codes decreed by institutions with the authority to do so.
There is obviously some validity to using these words in such ways. Yet
such uses are not a good starting point for understanding what natural law is.
The origins of the expression “natural law” are to be found in debates
between the Greek philosopher Plato and those thinkers known as the
Sophists. In broad terms the Sophists believed that politics was not about
questions of right, wrong, justice, or injustice. They maintained that social
arrangements reflected whoever was the strongest. Hence, it was “natural” for
the strong to rule the weak. Such was the “law” of human “nature.”
Plato disagreed with the Sophists. For him, politics and justice could
not be reduced to the rule of the strong. Nevertheless, Plato recognized the
rhetorical power of the term “natural.” He thus decided to use it for his own
purposes. In Plato’s thought, “natural” became a way of saying “human,” and
one distinctive feature of humans is that we have reason. This is what makes
humans different from animals. They act according to instinct alone. We do
not.
What did Plato mean by “reason?” First and foremost, he meant the
mind’s ability to know truth, and how to choose and act rightly as individuals
and communities in light of truth. Reason was thus more than our mind’s abil-
ity to know how to weigh and calculate quantifiable objects, or our capacity
to comprehend the workings of the material world in which we exist. Reason
certainly included those capacities; it found expression in fields such as math-
ematics or natural sciences like physics. But reason, from Plato’s standpoint,
was above all practical in the sense of helping us know ethical and philosophi-
cal truth and then how to choose and act rightly.
What is the “law” dimension of natural law? The law part concerns
that which is right for human beings. Here “right” does not primarily mean
“efficient” or “useful.” Insofar as efficiency means the optimal use of scarce
resources and avoidance of waste, or utility means the usefulness or value that
consumers experience from the use of a product, natural law regards efficiency
and utility as valuable and, as we will see, potential factors to consider when
making moral judgments.
But when the phrase “right” is used in natural law, the focus is upon
what reason identifies as good and just. Much of this was neatly explained
by Thomas Aquinas. To his mind, natural law consists of the basic principles
of practical reason for humans. The most fundamental of these principles is
that good is to be done and evil is to be avoided. Here good means reasonable
while evil means unreasonable. A second key principle of practical reasoning
is that knowledge is a good to be pursued while falsehood and ignorance are
to be overcome. A third principle is that you may never do evil even if you
anticipate that good may come of it.
This third principle merits more explanation as it is one that many have
found perplexing. Surely, the argument goes, there are instances in which one
must choose means (e.g., bombing German cities in World War II) that we
would not otherwise choose in order to realize a greater good (e.g., hasten
the defeat of Nazi Germany).
In one sense, the idea that we may never do evil that good may come
of it is a logical derivative of the first principle of doing good and avoiding
evil. That means avoiding the free choice of evil in every aspect of any action,
whether it is the object or goal of the act (defeating Nazi Germany), or the
means through which that goal is achieved (the waging of war). Once your act
involves a conscious choice of an evil (consciously targeting civilian popula-
tions and non-combatants while waging war), it follows that the act itself is
evil, no matter how much good might be realized. In other words, there are
some acts that cannot be rationally defended by reference to any end.
(ST I-II a.94, a.4). In this sense, the principles of natural law are “natural” to
human beings (ST I-II q.94, a2) not because of human biology but because
they are universally knowable by human reason (ST I-II q. 94, a.4; a.94, a.6)
and universally binding because of their basis in human reason (ST I-II q.
94, a.4). Reason thus permits us to know the truth about good and evil, even
though the directedness of such knowledge can be undermined or obscured
by the pull of powerful emotions, and the meaning of this information for
human choice and action can be hard to determine (ST I-II q.94, a.6).
What is the content of this truth about good and evil? In basic terms,
it is the truth about human flourishing. Such flourishing occurs when we can
freely choose particular things that are good in themselves (such as knowledge
or beauty) and therefore fulfilling (ST I-II q.94, a.2) for humans qua humans,
intelligible to human reason as reasonable for humans to pursue, and which
other species (like animals and plants) cannot know and cannot therefore
choose because they lack reason. Our knowledge of such goods comes about
through our intrinsic orientation toward the various goods that reason bids us
to pursue. These goods in turn provide reasons for humans as rational beings
to make this implicit awareness explicit and propositional through reflection
on human choice and action.
The study of natural law consequently involves identifying and apply-
ing the principles of rational thought to how we know and choose the good,
right, and just when we make free choices. Natural law maintains that for
us to be rational in the fullest sense is to choose and act in accordance with
what our reason tells us is the truth about the right course of action. Aquinas
defined truth as adaequatio intellectus et rei [conformity between the intel-
lect and reality] (ST I, q.21, a.2c). What Aquinas meant by “reality” is the
truth about something as it is in itself: that, for instance, the content of the
most basic principle of justice is to give others what they are owed, and not
something else; or that the content of the virtue of courage is not the same as
being reckless or being a coward.
Good is the first thing that falls under the apprehension of the
practical reason, which is directed to action: since every agent
acts for an end under the aspect of good. Consequently the first
principle in the practical reason is one founded on the notion of
good (ST I-II, q.94, a.2).
that 1) there is such a being; 2) that this being (God) has communicated to
humans who he is through special revelation to a particular people at a par-
ticular time as well as through the natural reason that he has inscribed into
the human mind; 3) that part of this communication by the same God allows
people to know what he wants them to do and what he does not want them
to do; and 4) that Judaism provides the most compelling account of all the
possible explanations for such things, the man’s choice to go to synagogue
reflects his subsequent decision to order his choices and actions on the basis
of these conclusions of his inquiry into the question of religion. Religion is
thus a self-evident good.
Other self-evident goods identified by Aquinas included life, procre-
ation, knowledge, sociability, and reasonable conduct (ST I-II q.94, a.2; q.94,
a.3). Contemporary natural law thinkers have further fleshed these out as the
following goods: life (and component aspects of the good of life like health),
friendship, knowledge of truth, aesthetic experience, skillful performance
in work or play, and practical reasonableness itself. The last of these is the
shaping of our participation in all the other self-evident goods in light of our
particular commitments and our choice to pursue specific projects (Finnis,
1980: 81-97).
When we act in ways that allow us to participate in one or more of
these goods, we fulfill ourselves in the way that humans should. Conversely,
when we act in ways that contradict such goods (such as intentionally working
in a less-than-skillful way, lying, killing, etc.), we damage ourselves. Indeed,
identifying certain reasons for action as always good also allows us to identify
certain actions that can never contribute to human fulfillment.
If, for example, knowledge of truth is good in itself, we also under-
stand that error and ignorance are evils that no person can reasonably wish
for themselves or others. This does not mean that we are obliged to know
everything about every possible subject. All of us have to choose what subjects
we are going to invest our time and energy in ascertaining the truth about.
Such choices are driven in part by our particular aptitudes and our specific
obligations. An unintended albeit foreseeable side-effect of this is that we will
remain ignorant of many topics. That, however, is very different from saying
that I consciously choose error over truth, or ignorance over knowledge.
Natural law does not hold that we must try and participate in all of
these goods in all of our freely chosen actions. This is impossible. We cannot
experience of moral good and evil, experience itself cannot define, intellectu-
ally speaking, why one action is good and another is wrong. Only reason can
identify what is desirable in the sense of what is good. Only by allowing our
rational will to direct our lives, can we become free agents of our decisions
rather than slaves of our passions.
For Aquinas, the more virtuous we are, the more likely it is that we
will act well and the easier it becomes to choose the good freely. Pursuing
the good and avoiding evil, he insists, won’t happen simply through studying
philosophy. We will always need to cultivate the virtues if we are to act well
(Aquinas, 1271–1272/1993: II, 2, 259), especially what are called the cardinal
virtues of prudence, justice, courage, and temperance.
And by prudence, Aquinas doesn’t mean shrewdness, being worldly-
wise, cautious, or pragmatic. Rather, he means the type of practical wisdom
that involves understanding and applying the principles of natural law in an
integrated way, with discernment, and in accordance with one’s effort to live
all the other virtues. This means, among other things, that the prudent per-
son will exclude from her reflection and deliberation any choice that involves
choosing to violate directly any of the moral goods: that is, to do evil.
Moral absolutes
This raises the question of how natural law understands the nature of evil acts.
Human actions, from the standpoint of natural law, can go wrong in several
ways. An act might be wrong, for example, simply because it involves direct-
ing oneself against a good like truth, for instance, by lying (ST II-II q.110, a.3).
There is, however, another dimension to natural law theory that shapes
its understanding of free choice, morality, and virtue. This is its insistence that
there are certain choices which may never be made; that is, certain actions
that are never acceptable, regardless of the circumstances or the nobility of
the intention, because such actions are always seriously wrong by reason of
their object: that is, what we are choosing to do.
An example of what natural law scholars call an exceptionless norm is
the direct killing of an innocent person: in other words, directly choosing to
violate the fundamental good of life. Even if an act of directly killing an inno-
cent person might save an entire city from destruction, such an act remains
intrinsically wrong by reason of its object. It is always irreconcilable with the
choice of the good. There is never a good reason to make murder the delib-
erate object of our act. It follows that, in accordance with the principle that
good is to be done and evil avoided, such an act can never be freely chosen.
There are no exceptions.
To this extent, natural law is grounded on a commitment to moral
absolutes. Examples of other acts that would meet the same criteria are lying
(which violates the good of truth) and theft (which violates the good of prop-
erty). Aquinas puts it this way: “Let us say that someone robs in order to feed
the poor: in this case, even though the intention is good, the uprightness of
the will is lacking. Consequently, no evil done with a good intention can be
excused” (Aquinas, 1273/1954: 250). For what is being willed is theft, and all
theft is always wrong.
This is not to say that natural law denies certain relativities in moral-
ity. One such relativity is that many moral principles apply variously. Take,
for example, the obligation to honour our parents. The requirements of liv-
ing out this affirmative norm rightly vary with persons and circumstances.
Some of the ways in which an eleven-year-old child honours his living parents
can’t help but be different to the way in which the same person as an adult
honours his aging or deceased parents. Note, however, that acknowledging
this variability involves no denial of the principle that certain acts may never
be freely chosen.
Natural law also affirms a wide pluralism about what we may rightly
choose. While natural law theory posits certain acts as never worthy of
humans, it also insists that there is significant room for judgment concern-
ing the reasonable and good options that people can choose. Some of these
judgments may be incompatible with each other even though they are derived
from the same principles.
From a natural law standpoint, for example, there is no single abso-
lutely right answer to the question of what percentage of a given country’s
GDP should be directly controlled by the state. Natural law thinkers acknowl-
edge that answering such a question depends upon theoretical and empirical
information about which people equally well informed by practical reason
can and do form different, even incompatible views.
By contrast, if we try to relativize those negative norms of natural law
which forbid absolutely, natural law insists that the door opens quickly to bar-
barism. Suddenly it becomes conceivable that the choice to carpet-bomb cities
full of non-combatants might be acceptable if it’s deemed likely to undermine
the enemy’s will to fight. Maybe it’s licit to steal from your employer “just this
once” to pay your rent next month. In the absence of exceptionless absolutes,
you are at least in principle open to choosing evil in order to realize good,
which means in effect that you are willing to freely choose to do evil.
choices only further complicates matters. All these factors necessitate institu-
tions, laws, and protocols that enable societies to make decisions about how
to coordinate people’s free choices in ways that meet the requirements of
reason and justice.
Herein lies two of the reasons why natural law is so important for lib-
erty and free societies more generally. Put simply, natural law underscores that
we cannot flourish if we cannot make free choices, for it is in the very process
of making free choices that we can become virtuous and actualize the goods
that make us distinctly human. As we will see, natural law does not maintain
that government and law must be neutral vis-à-vis questions of morality and
virtue, particularly insofar as our actions effect other people and touch on
the requirements of justice. Nevertheless, much of natural law’s reflections
on politics, law, and economics are underpinned by the conviction that any
political, legal, and economic coordination of people’s choices must give as
many people as possible the space they need to make free choices.
That in turn points to the second and complementary reason why
natural law matters for freedom. It provides us with principles around which
to develop a political and legal framework that helps to prevent the state from
exercising excessive control over its citizenry. Sometimes such expansions
of government power are undertaken in the name of seeking to realize good
ends, such as wanting people to be virtuous and less susceptible to vice. On
other occasions, it is done with the explicit objective of unjustly circumscrib-
ing freedom, often in radical ways that involve grave violations of justice in
order to establish a tyranny intent on pursuing particular goals and which
views any emphasis on liberty as undermining the realization of such ends.
But whether the ends are good or bad, preventing illegitimate expan-
sions of state power so as to enhance the possibilities for people to freely
choose to pursue the good is a major focus of natural law thought. As suc-
cessive chapters illustrate, this has major implications for how natural law
understands the role of law and government, the nature of property and the
functioning of the economy, and the role of international law and the character
of trade between nations. Before we turn to those, however, we need to grasp
the way in which natural law understands two things that have been crucial
for the development of free societies: the nature of rights and the character
of justice.
The legal obligation to respect rights has been formally recognized by most
countries since the 1948 United Nations Declaration of Human Rights. Yet
as one of the members of the Declaration’s drafting committee stated at the
time, “We are unanimous about these rights on condition that no one asks
why” (Thils, 1981: 51). The participants, it appears, decided that agreement on
a common philosophical foundation for rights was unlikely to be achieved.
Rights are usually presented as a product of a modern post-Enlight-
enment world and associated with figures like John Locke and events such
as the American and French Revolutions. There is, however, a strong case
to suggest that the first substantive conceptions of rights were developed by
medieval natural law thinkers whose ideas on this subject were clarified and
developed further by their modern counterparts, some of whom were reacting
to expansionist tendencies on the state’s part.
of the universe and what that means for how we live our lives. Whether we
are a theist, agnostic, or atheist, we can agree that religion is a basic reason
for action, inasmuch as we all have reason, without appeal to ulterior motives,
to ascertain the truth about ultimate or transcendent realities and order our
lives to accord with that reality.
No further explanation is necessary for the right of religious liberty: it
gives direct effect to this good of religion as truth-seeking about the transcen-
dent. Searching for the truth about the transcendent presumes the freedom to
do so. You cannot pursue knowledge of the transcendent without the constant
interior decision to do so. To force someone to be religious or an atheist, or to
force someone to be Buddhist rather than Jewish, is to eliminate the element
of the interior choice for the good of religious truth by overwhelming it with
the inner deliberation to avoid being harmed (George, 1999: 125-138).
Acknowledgment of this right inevitably raises the issue of political
structures. By saying that individuals have a natural right to religious free-
dom—and, by extension, a right to be part of communities based on pursuing
religious truth—natural law implicitly condemns any political system which
denies that liberty as a matter of policy. In that sense, the natural law account
of rights reveals important truths about the structure of rightly ordered politi-
cal arrangements. The state that recognizes religious liberty in the sense out-
lined above is by definition a limited state, and acknowledges its fundamental
incompetence in important spheres of private life and civil society.
The legal and political questions do not stop here. How, for example,
do we resolve the inevitable conflicts between people’s legitimate exercise
of this right and other rights? Natural law theorists have addressed many of
these questions in their treatment of justice.
There are three species of justice, as there are three types of rela-
tionship between any “whole:” the relations of the parts among
themselves, the relation of the whole to the parts, and the relations
of the part to the whole. And likewise there are three justices:
Limited Government
and Rule of Law
Any discussion of the nature and ends of liberty and justice inevitably touches
upon the role of government and law in society. A good place to begin reflect-
ing upon natural law’s approach to these questions is Aquinas’s understanding
of law.
In his Summa Theologiae, Aquinas defined law “an ordinance of rea-
son for the common good, made by him who has care of the community, and
promulgated” (ST I-II, q.90, a.4). “Law” in this statement means laws formally
made by the legitimate political authority. “Reason” means natural law, which
signals the law itself must be reasonable rather than driven by whatever the
authorities just happen to want. “Him” means the political authority: i.e.,
government and legal officials such as legislators, judges, and government
ministers. Finally, the “common good” means the conditions that assist indi-
viduals and groups in a given political community to make free choices for
the goods that promote human flourishing.
This last point is especially important because the common good of
a given political community is not a license for the state to do whatever it
wants. What is called the “political common good” puts firm limits what the
state can do vis-à-vis individuals and non-state communities ranging from
the family to businesses.
such as human life and health are put at unreasonable risk. When we obey
traffic regulations, we implicitly embrace that moral rationale.
Second, natural law underscores that the moral principles and norms
of justice that apply to all forms of human action apply as much to state actors
as they do to individuals and communities. In Chapter 1, we observed that
natural law emphasizes that there are exceptionless moral norms that identify
certain choices as always and in every case evil, and hence never to be chosen
by individuals or communities. Those who write legislation, apply policy, or
interpret law are not exempt from adherence to these norms. Thus the state
cannot engage in activities such as stealing people’s property, violating their
bodily integrity by torturing them, forcing them to lie, etc.
Third, natural law does not hold that all moral evil can or should be
prohibited by the state. The free choice to lie, for example, is always wrong
because such acts always damage the good of truth. Yet we don’t legally pro-
hibit and punish all acts of lying. An act of lying damages the liar himself and
many types of communities (friendships, families, etc.). Not all lies, however,
directly undermine the political common good. Hence, we generally restrict
legal prohibition and punishment of lying to areas such as court proceedings
or devices like contracts. By contrast, all acts of murder are not only wrong
in themselves; they also severely damage the political common good insofar
as failure to deter and penalize murderers severely undermines the ability
of individuals and communities to pursue the good. The law consequently
prohibits and punishes acts of murder.
Some of these distinctions were worked out at length by Aquinas.
Consider, for example, the Summa’s description of the proper goal of law:
“For the end of human law is the temporal tranquility of the state, which end
law effects by directing external actions, as regards those evils which might
disturb the peaceful condition of the state” (ST I-II, q.98 a.1c).
The words “external actions” and “peaceful condition of the state” tell
us that positive law is concerned primarily with the demands of justice and
peace. Aquinas spells out the fuller significance of this when he explains:
Then, as if to make sure his readers get the point, Aquinas states: “and
if it commands acts of other virtues, this is only in so far as they assume the
nature of justice” (ST I-II q.100 a.2c).
Underlying this claim is Aquinas’ argument that not all acts of virtue
have the political common good as their object. The object of many acts of
virtue is the private good of individuals, families, and other communities.
Such acts fall outside the immediate scope of the political common good for
which the rulers are responsible.
This becomes clearer when Aquinas answers the question, “Whether
human law prescribes acts of all the virtues?” His response is as follows:
To be sure, Aquinas does not regard justice and peace as having mini-
malist content. But to Aquinas’ mind, the law’s proper concern for justice
and tranquility does not authorize the state to promote all acts of virtue.
Natural law’s conception of the political common good thus puts principled
constraints on using positive law to shape the free choices and actions of
individuals and groups living within a given political community.
Ethicorum, V.11 n.10, in Busa, 1996). Nonetheless even after laws are made,
announced, and implemented, Aquinas recognized that further exercises of
judgment (and therefore reason) are required, not least because many laws
inevitably require judges to resolve unavoidable ambiguities of meaning, to
reconcile different laws, and to fill in gaps in law.
This attention to reasonableness is at the heart of natural law’s concep-
tion of the rule of law. It stresses that the very idea of the rule of law is partly
derived from the conclusion that it is reasonable to limit arbitrary power.
Rule of law thus contains a distinct inner morality insofar as arbitrariness is
understood to be inherently unjust.
In the twentieth century, this point was emphasized by the legal phi-
losopher Lon Fuller. He maintained that rule of law incarnates an inner moral
reasoning inasmuch as there are certain conditions of reason that a law must
meet before it is understood to be a legitimate law (Fuller, 1977). For Fuller,
rule of law means that a law must be:
• sufficiently general;
• publicly promulgated (you cannot have secret laws);
• prospective (i.e., applicable only to future behaviour, not past);
• clear and intelligible;
• free of contradiction;
• relatively constant in the sense that they are sufficiently stable to
allow people to be guided by their knowledge of the content of the
rules;
• possible to obey; and
• administered in a way that does not wildly diverge from their obvi-
ous or apparent meaning (Fuller 1977: 33-38).
justice and makes a vital contribution to freedom from unjust coercion and
arbitrary decision-making by those wielding legitimate coercive power.
The use and ownership of material things is a topic to which natural law
thinkers have consistently given thought. In Chapter 2, we observed that the
proper use of material goods, whether as individuals or in exchanges between
individuals and communities, is a prime focus of commutative justice and
distributive justice. This, however, does not exhaust the scope of natural law
analysis of these questions.
If individuals and communities are to make free choices for moral
goods and to be virtuous, they often require what might be called “instru-
mental goods.” These are goods that have their own value and which can be
used to protect and promote the pursuance of fundamental goods like work
and truth, but which are not in themselves fulfilling.
Material things are a prominent example of such an instrumental good.
They are not a fundamental good in the sense that goods such as life, truth, and
friendship are intrinsic to human identity. Rather, material things—whether
in the form of the natural world, or things that humans have created by apply-
ing their intelligence and labour to the natural world, or devices that act as a
symbol or store of value (like money)—are goods which are a means that help
humans to flourish. Money in the form of capital, for instance, enables entre-
preneurs to build businesses that grow and employ people, thereby enabling
others to participate in the good of work.
The question then becomes: how do we ensure that material things
help to promote the flourishing of all members of a community? The natural
law answer to that question lies in the application of two principles: common
use and private ownership.
the neighbour’s good. It only gives them a right to use them if it is necessary
to escape the need” (Azpilcueta, 1556: 206).
Some of these scholastic glosses on Aquinas’s position on common
use and private property, we may speculate, owe something to external fac-
tors. One was the emergence, after the sixteenth century religious schisms in
Western Europe, of the modern state: one which became increasingly power-
ful and, in terms of economic policy, more inclined to impose heavier taxation
and quite willing to engage in currency debasements to reduce government
debts. In their criticisms of the negative effects of such policies, Mercado
and Mariana explicitly linked their arguments to considerations about unjust
infringements of private ownership of property. Mariana went so far as to
describe currency debasement as a form of theft (Mariana, 1609/1950b: 586).
Similar arguments about the use and ownership of material goods
are to be found in seventeenth and eighteenth century Northern European
Protestant natural law treatments of private property. In his De iure praedae
Commentarius [Commentary on the Law of Prize and Booty], Grotius stated
that because all things had been given by God to “the human race, not upon
individual men, and since such gifts could not be turned to use except by pri-
vate occupation, it necessarily followed that what had been seized on should
become his to each” (Grotius, 1604/2006: 11). From this was derived the right
to property, not least because it was “permissible to acquire to oneself, and to
retain, those things which are useful for life” (Grotius, 1604/2006: 10). “Let
no one occupy,” he added, “what has been occupied by another” (Grotius,
1604/2006: 13).
A later generation of Protestant natural law scholars elaborated upon
these points using the language of rights more expansively. This is espe-
cially evident in the writings of the Presbyterian ministers and philosophers
Gershom Carmichael (1672–1729) and Francis Hutcheson (1694–1746). Both
men are rightly described as forefathers of the Scottish Enlightenment. Yet
they are also part of the natural law tradition. Carmichael even acknowledged
that he found “the doctrines of the Scholastics, or rather of the more ancient
among them... much more correct and more consonant with sound reason,
as well as with sacred scripture, than the doctrines that are opposed to them
today” (Carmichael, 1724/2002: 229).
Concerning material goods, Carmichael held that God does not appear
to have assigned any one particular external non-human thing to any one
Confronted with this and other moral questions, many clergy in turn
looked to theologians and canon lawyers charged with the responsibility of
providing guidance to priests on such subjects. In his discussion of money
changing, Mercado informs his readers that he wants to help confessors “who,
abstracted as they are from the world, cannot understand the ways of these
entangled dealings” (Mercado, 1571/1975: bk.2, ch.2, fol.313). Some of the
most detailed descriptions of sixteenth and seventeenth century commercial
life are contained in these writings.
Having gathered such information, many scholastics applied the
insights of natural law to the new situation enveloping European life and,
increasingly, the Americas and the Far East in the wake of European colonial-
ization. This produced an unprecedented number of treatises on the moral
dimension of economic life by scholastics like Mercado, Vitoria, de Soto, and
Grotius, which sought to assess the ethical dimension of the new and develop-
ing commercial practices in light of the demands of natural law.
These scholastics’ inquiries consequently embraced activities and
practices as varied as taxation, coinage, foreign exchange, credit, and prices.
They also analyzed the workings of the banking business of their time, and
showed how the fluctuations in foreign exchange were related to changes in
the purchasing power of different currencies.
One unforeseen result of these reflections was the theoretical con-
ceptualization of important aspects of commercial life. These include the
subjective theory of value (the idea that a good has whatever value which the
valuing agent gives it), a simple version of the quantity theory of money (the
notion that the general price level of goods and services is proportional to
the money supply in an economy), and deep understanding of the nature of
inflation through studying the effects of coinage debasement.
Scholastic thinkers were also the first to work out important concepts
vital for a market economy such as the distinction between value in use and
value in exchange, the idea of comparative advantage, the concept of scar-
city, the character of opportunity cost, the origins and nature of capital, and
the economic role of interest (Gregg, 2016: 39-87). Some scholastics such as
Leonardus Lessius were especially critical of monopolies established by legal
grants from rulers, portraying them as sins against justice and charity, and
violations of people’s freedom to engage in trade (Lessius, 1606/2020: IV lib.
2, cap. 21, dub. 20).
There are, however, two areas in which scholastic thinkers made dis-
tinctive contributions to the development of contemporary free economies
that reflect responses to particular issues confronting society at the time.
Many scholastics writing in the early modern period were living at a time in
which the premier Catholic power of the time, Spain, had not only acquired
a world empire but also was experiencing the economic costs of the almost
continuous wars that accompanied and followed such acquisitions.
While Aquinas’s treatment of the state had outlined the limits of the
scope of government power, scholastic writers gravitated to underscoring
the state’s limited competence in the economic realm. De Soto, for example,
emphasized how the state’s excessive intervention in economic life damaged
the common good: “Great dangers for the republic spring from financial
exhaustion; the population suffers privations and is greatly oppressed by daily
increases in taxes” (1553-1554/1968: bk.3, q.6, a.7).
Reacting to the financial privations visited upon Philip II’s Spain as
the king struggled to suppress rebellion in the Netherlands, ward off Muslim
invaders from the Mediterranean, and maintain order throughout his ever-
expanding dominions, Mariana argued that public law and government
should focus on protecting private property rather than usurping it. While
he noted that taxation was necessary if government was to perform its essen-
tial functions, Mariana observed that the state tended to move beyond such
boundaries very quickly and to increase taxation accordingly (1609/1950b:
23-27). Mariana also argued that government-sponsored currency debase-
ments, excessive expenditures, and subsequent tax increases effectively facili-
tated the slow but systematic violation of private property (1605/1950a: 548).
The second important contribution scholastic thinkers made to the
development of market economies concerned the issues of prices—or, more
precisely what constituted a just price. In this regard, Aquinas’s reasoning
provided the basic foundations for the natural law treatment of this issue,
which matured in the period of the second scholasticism.
Aquinas invested considerable effort in examining how one deter-
mined the justice of a given commercial transaction, how one measured the
value of a good, and what constituted a just price.
The question of the just price, he argued, fell primarily into the area
of commutative justice: that is, what individuals who enter freely into an
exchange owed each other
In Aquinas’s view, it was normally the case that the measure of some-
thing’s value is the price it would presently fetch “in the market” [secundum
commune forum] (ST II–II, q.61 a.4c; II–II, q.77 a.1, a.4c, and ad.2). This was
understood as the exchanges between willing buyers and sellers in the same
place and timeframe, with all parties to the exchange being aware of the merits
and defects of what is being exchanged (ST II–II, q.77 a.1).
Significantly Aquinas specified that this market price will vary from
time to time and location to location, depending on whether the good is scarce
or abundant [secundum diversitatem copiae et inopiae rerum] (ST II–II, q.77
a.2, ad.2). He also insisted that sellers who enter the marketplace did not vio-
late justice if they sold a commodity at the available price knowing that the
price will fall when other sellers come to market, provided that they do not
lie to anyone (ST II–II, q.77 a.3, ad.4). Though Aquinas agreed that the state
could regulate prices in emergencies (Roover, 1974: 331), he held that the just
price is normally the market price in the absence of fraud or collusion.
Later scholastic thinkers continued to develop this line of thought,
especially through linking price to value. Unlike Adam Smith, they did not
adhere to a labour theory of value (the idea that the value of goods and services
depends upon how much work has been expended on creating a product).
Instead, they drew upon Aquinas and other medieval natural law thinkers
like Bernardino of Siena (1380–1444) and Antonio of Florence (1389–1459)
to develop the idea that the value (and therefore price) attached to goods and
services primarily depended upon the utility attached to them by people. They
often employed the phrase “common estimation” to describe this.
According to these scholastics, three elements determined the price of
saleable goods. These were a good’s viruositas [objective use in value], raritas
[scarcity], and complacibilitas [desirability or common estimation] (Chafuen,
2003, 81). Over time scholastic thinking on this subject gravitated towards
the conclusion that the just price was the value of the good as determined by
common estimation in the market. Francisco de Vitoria, for example, wrote
that wherever there is a marketable good, the price was not determined by
the nature of the good or the labour employed to create it. “If,” he specified,
“according to common estimation, the bushel of wheat is worth four silver
pieces and somebody buys it for three, this would constitute an injustice to
the seller because the common estimation of a bushel of wheat is four silver
pieces” (Brown Scott, 1934: bk.2, q.2, a.1).
Aquinas believed that those involved in commerce, including those using and
managing capital, were capable of doing great things.
Aquinas’s reflections on the nature of the virtue of magnificence were
especially revealing. He defined magnificence as the virtue of “that which is
great in the use of money” (ST II-II, q.134, a.3). It is not so much, he speci-
fied, about making gifts or charity. Nor, Aquinas added, does the person who
embraces this virtue “intend principally to be lavish towards himself” (ST II-II,
q.134, a.1). Rather, he said, magnificence concerns “some great work which
has to be produced” with (1) a view to the good that goes beyond the imme-
diate gain, and (2) which cannot be done “without expenditure or outlay” of
great sums of money. Moreover, magnificence for Aquinas also concerned
“expenditure in reference to hope, by attaining to the difficulty, not simply,
as magnanimity does, but in a determinate matter, namely expenditure” (ST
II-II, q.134, a.4).
It is important to note that Aquinas was not focused here upon ques-
tions of property or wealth per se. Likewise, magnificentia—understood by
Aquinas as the doing of great works which require great expenditure and
the use of reason to ensure that there is minimal risk of great loss (ST II-II,
q.134)—is not so much about who owns the wealth. As Aquinas specified,
the poor man can also choose to do great things (ST II-II, q.134, a.3). Rather
it is about the one who deploys great sums to help realize a “great work.”
That encompasses an extraordinary spectrum of individuals, ranging from
the banker lending capital to others to businesses that seek to use the capital
loaned to them to start and grow an enterprise.
For Gaius, the ius gentium is thus ultimately derived from the ius natu-
rale insofar as the origins of the former lie in the latter.
these differences involved “the art of thus applying [the law of nature] with a
precision founded on right reason” (Vattel, 1758/2008: Preliminaries, 6). This
was particularly true when it came to commercial relations between states
which, from Vattel’s standpoint, increasingly formed the subject matter and
focus of the law of nations.
368). This shift also owed something to the Treaty of Westphalia’s emphasis
upon the full power of sovereign states to control who and what crossed their
borders.
Writing almost a century later, Vattel was particularly conscious of
how the acceleration of trade across borders was transforming relations
between states. He was also aware that many were starting to question the
efficacy and justice of the dominant mercantile system. His approach to the
topic of trade was to begin by grounding the right to trade across boundaries
in the principle of common use. “All men,” he writes, “ought to find on earth
the things they stand in need of ” (Vattel, 1758/2008: bk.2, ch.2, s.21). Vattel
particularly stressed the observation that no nation or people could procure
everything it needed from its own resources:
This is what Vattel called the foundation “of the general obligation
incumbent on nations reciprocally to cultivate commerce” (Vattel, 1758/2008:
bk.2, ch.2, s.21). On this basis, he repeated Grotius’s condemnation of
Portugal’s earlier attempts to establish a monopoly on trade in the Far East
(Vattel, 1758/2008: bk.2, ch.2, s.24). Vattel further condemned “monopoly” as
being “in general... contrary to the rights of the citizens” (Vattel, 1758/2008:
bk.1, ch.8, s.97).
To underscore the point, he stated that “Every nation ought, therefore,
not only to countenance trade, as far as it reasonably can, but even to protect
and favor it” (Vattel, 1758/2008: bk.2, ch.2, s.22). This freedom, according
to Vattel, implies limits to what states can do vis-à-vis liberty to trade across
boundaries:
Vattel did not, it should be cautioned, see this natural right to trade as
absolute. “The obligation of trading with other nations,” Vattel commented, “is
in itself an imperfect obligation” (Vattel, 1758/2008: bk.2, ch.2, s.25). There
are instances, he states, when a nation ought to decline a commerce which
is disadvantageous or dangerous (Vattel, 1758/2008: bk.2, ch.2, s.25; see also
bk.1, ch.8, s.98). The state’s obligation to provide for the nation’s necessi-
ties (such as national defense) and uphold the sovereignty with which it has
been invested by the Treaty of Westphalia might mean that governments
may occasionally have to regulate the trade of particular goods (like military
technology) in ways that departed from a strict free trade position. But for
Vattel, free commerce between nations should be the norm. People have a
natural right to trade inside and between countries, and while the state may
regulate that right, such a right cannot be suppressed.
Conclusion
Within 18 years of the publication of The Law of Nations, Adam Smith’s Wealth
of Nations made a systematic case for free trade primarily based on empirical
observations concerning comparative advantage and a penetrating critique
of mercantilism. Though certainly aware of the writings on trade by Grotius
and Pufendorf (and, likely, Vitoria and Suárez), Smith did not approach the
topic from the standpoint of natural law, the law of nations, notions of ius, or
commutative and distributive justice. Nor does the Wealth of Nations set out
to establish a natural right to trade as a general ethical or legal proposition.
What matters, however, is that natural law thinkers writing about
commerce between nations developed a principled case for free trade based
on natural law claims about liberty and the nature and ends of property. As
observed, they were very cognizant of the more strictly economic dimensions
of free trade. But they did not begin their arguments with reflections on cost-
benefit or utility. It is not that such considerations are necessarily incompatible
with natural law arguments for limited government, rule of law, and private
property. Scholastic thinkers did, however, believe that one could and should
write about economic topics like trade between nations from the standpoint
of reasoning that is concerned with truth and justice.
Conclusion
Over the centuries, natural law ethics and reasoning has proved extraordi-
narily resilient. The relative influence of different philosophical positions
waxes and wanes. But natural law’s understanding of the character of rea-
son and the human mind’s capacity to know the truth about reality remain
immensely attractive to people living in very different social, political, eco-
nomic conditions,
One reason for this, I suggest, is that while the world of the twentieth-
first century may differ greatly from the societies in which Aquinas, Suárez,
and Grotius lived, the basic problems addressed by natural law thinkers per-
sist. Tyranny has, after all, emerged in every age. People have been arguing
about the nature of freedom and justice from time immemorial. Arguments
about the origins and ends of property never seem to go away.
Judging the morality and rightness of one’s own and others’ choices
and actions as we respond to such problems requires humility and experi-
ence. Yet it also demands some degree of confidence that principled answers
to these questions do exist, and that our minds are capable of knowing such
answers.
Natural law holds that our reason can provide us with knowledge of
first principles that help us develop coherent and logical responses to the
moral, political, legal, and economic quandaries that confront us. It is thus at
odds with any theory that maintains an a priori commitment to philosophical
skepticism at its core. Natural law does not deny that we should be careful
about accepting without any critical reflection anyone’s insistence upon the
rightness or wrongness of a particular path of action. Nor does natural law
dispute that right reason and sound moral judgment is in many ways rela-
tive to situations and so varies rightly from time to time, place to place, and
even person to person. As already observed, it is part of the very meaning of
many moral principles (e.g., honour your parents) that they apply variously,
i.e., in varying ways on varying occasions. Natural law theory, we have seen,
also acknowledges that there are often many possibilities for doing good that
might be incompatible with each other, but which are nonetheless consistent
with the principles of practical reason.
Curiously, it may well be natural law’s insistence that there are uni-
versal moral and philosophical truths knowable through right reason that
represents one of its most important contributions to the maintenance of free
societies. For many people who primarily think about natural law in terms
of prohibitions, this connection between truth and liberty may seem initially
counterintuitive. It’s therefore worth reflecting more on this point.
Many philosophers and social scientists have argued that psychologi-
cal urges, cultural and social influences, and economic conditions affect an
individual’s potential to choose. Enhanced knowledge of these factors has
helped us to be more attentive to their impact on human choice and action.
But it has also led some to conclude that reason only allows us to decide how
we achieve certain objectives, and to view the ends of our choices as the result
of the unchosen workings of our emotions and instincts, which themselves
are often reduced to the workings of chemical processes within human beings
and/or the results of our cultural conditioning.
Another factor at work is the post-Enlightenment tendency to think
that 1) the only truth that we can really know is the information yielded
through the natural sciences, and that 2) we should consequently be scepti-
cal about any claim that cannot be explained or proven by empirical methods
of inquiry. Within such frameworks, any claim not grounded on an empiri-
cal basis is often deemed to be a subjective interpretation and therefore not
universally binding.
Reinforcing these tendencies has been awareness that many opinions
and movements have claimed the mantle of truth and, in the name of truth,
suppressed freedom and murdered millions via guillotine, gas chamber, or
gulag. Once someone claims to know the truth about morality, the argument
goes, the temptation is to force others to embrace such truths through the
use of state power.
We have already seen in Chapter 3 that natural law does not translate
into an open-ended use of state power to promote particular moral goods
and prohibit specific moral evils. On the contrary, natural law puts principled
limits on the state’s scope to do so. It is also arguable that scepticism about
the type of truth-claims promoted by natural law opens the door to significant
curtailments of freedom and justice.
The American philosopher Richard Rorty (1931-2007) once wrote
that it is only on the basis of relativism that democracy and freedom will be
safe. “No specific doctrine,” he stated, “is much of a danger, but the idea that
democracy depends on adhesion to some such doctrine is” (Rorty, 1988: 33).
In Rorty’s view, the search for impartial standards like those proposed by
natural law against which humans can judge themselves, others, and those in
positions of authority, is futile. Nonetheless, Rorty later added, those who hold
to no objective standard and claim no foundation in practical reason can still
feel outrage about unjust curtailments of liberty (Rorty, 1991: 31).
But how, we must ask, is the rightness of such outrage to be discerned?
How can we know it is justified without the type of reference point that Rorty
rejects?
Think about it this way: If there is only opinion—your opinion, my
opinion, everyone else’s opinion—but no truth, and if every opinion is valid
simply by virtue of being freely chosen, or by reference to one’s subjective pref-
erences, we could state: “The Nazis and Communists cannot be held account-
able for their destruction of freedom and justice because they acted according
to their own preferences, they showed real commitment to their opinions, and
who in any case is to judge that what they did was wrong?”
In such circumstances, public debate can easily cease to be a matter
of reasoned discussion of the truth of people’s positions, whether the topic
is trade, property rights, the nature of justice, or the limits of state power.
Instead, there is a possibility that questions of politics, law, and morality will
slowly gravitate to the issue of who can muster sufficient force—whether
through electoral majorities or the barrel of a gun—to advance their opinion
over the opinions of others.
From this perspective, the commitment to knowing ethical and phil-
osophical truth which is central to natural law and shapes its approach to
political, legal, and economic order may not be as great a threat to liberty
as sometimes supposed. If something as important to free societies as the
rights that protect individuals and communities from unjust coercion from
others and the state are not grounded in truth-claims about the character
of good and evil, and therefore justice and injustice, we cannot discount the
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The literature on natural law is vast and is found in disciplines like philosophy,
law, theology, political science, metaphysics, and history.
Budziszewski, J. (1997). Written on the Heart: The Case for Natural Law.
IVP Academic.
Grisez, Germain, and Russell Shaw (1988). Beyond the New Morality: The
Responsibilities of Freedom. University of Notre Dame Press.
Anscombe, G.E.M. (2011). Human Life, Action and Ethics: Essays by G.E.M.
Anscombe. Mary Geach and Luke Gormally, eds. Imprint Academic.
Boyle, Joseph M., Germain Grisez, and Olaf Tollefsen (1976). Free Choice: A
Self-Referential Argument. University of Notre Dame Press.
Hittinger, Russell (2003). The First Grace: Rediscovering the Natural Law in
a Post-Christian World. ISI Books.
Hopfl, Harro (2004). Jesuit Political Thought: The Society of Jesus and the
State, c.1540–1630. Cambridge University Press.
Midgley, E.B.F. (1975). The Natural Law Tradition and the Theory of
International Relations. Paul Elek.
Rasmussen, Douglas B., and Douglas J. Den Uyl (2005). Norms of Liberty:
A Perfectionist Basis for Non-Perfectionist Politics. Pennsylvania State
University Press.
Taliaferro, Karen (2017). Ibn Rushd and Natural Law: Mediating Human
and Divine Law. Oxford University Press.
Tierney, Brian (1997). The Idea of Natural Rights: Studies on Natural Rights,
Natural Law and Church Law 1150–1625. Emory University Scholars.
Some journals and collected editions on all aspects of natural law thought
include:
Angier, Tom, ed. (2019). The Cambridge Companion to Natural Law Ethics.
Cambridge University Press.
Finnis, John, ed. (1992). Natural Law. 2 vols. New York University Press.
George, Robert P., ed. (1996). Natural Law, Liberalism, and Morality.
Oxford University Press.
Gregg, Samuel, and Harold James, eds. (2012). Natural Law, Economics and
the Common Good. Imprint Academic.
Holmes, Jr., Oliver Wendell (1918). Natural Law. Harvard Law Review 32, 1:
40–44.
Kelsen, Hans (1945/1961). General Theory of Law and State. A. Wedberg, tr.
Russell and Russell.
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Citation Samuel Gregg (2021). The Essential Natural Law. Fraser Institute.
Publisher’s acknowledgments
The Fraser Institute would like to express its gratitude to the Lotte and John Hecht
Memorial Foundation for its support for Essential Hayek (2015) and Essential Adam
Smith (2018), which established the foundation for the extended Essential Scholars ser-
ies. We would also like to thank the John Templeton Foundation, along with the Lotte
and John Hecht Memorial Foundation, for their support of this specific volume, The
Essential Natural Law.
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