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The Essential

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.

Printed and bound in Canada

Cover artwork
Leslie Lightheart

ISBN 978-0-88975-660-1ø
Contents
Notes on Texts Used  /  vii

Introduction / 1

1 What is Natural Law?  /  13

2 Rights and Justice  /  27

3 Limited Government and Rule of Law  /  35

4 Property and the Economy  /  43

5 The Law of Nations and International Trade  /  55

6 Conclusion / 65

Works Cited / 69

Suggested Further Reading   /  75

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.

“Aristotle (undated/1980): V.1.1129b12-14” means Aristotle (undated),


Nicomachean Ethics, W.D. Ross, ed. (1980), Oxford University Press, Book V,
chapter 1, Bekker page 1129, Bekker Column B, Line Numbers 12-14 of the
edition cited.

“Aquinas, Quaestiones de Quolibet Quodlibetal IV, q.9 a3c” means Thomas


Aquinas (1256-1259; 1269-1272), Quaestiones de Quolibet Quodlibetal,
Quodlibet IV, Question 9, Answer 3c of the edition cited in Busa, Robert, ed.
(1996), Thomae Aquinatis Opera Omnia cum Hypertextibus in CD-ROM.
Editoria Elettronica Editel.

“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.

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“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.

“Grotius 1625/2005: II.25.3.3” means Hugo Grotius (1625), On the Rights of


War and Peace, Richard Tuck, ed. (2005), Liberty Fund, Book II, Chapter 25,
Paragraph 3.3 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.

“Mercado, 1571/1975: bk.2, ch.2, fol.19” means Tomas de Mercado (1571),


Summa de Tractos y Contractos, IEP (1975), Book 2, Chapter 2, Folio 19 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.

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The Essential Natural Law  d ix 

“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.

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Introduction

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.

A developing tradition of thought


Natural law is often seen as an ethical theory associated with Christianity,
and even more particularly Catholic Christianity. Major natural law theo-
rists like Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274), Francisco Suárez (1548–1617), Hugo
Grotius (1583–1645), and Emer Vattel (1714–1767) were believing, practicing
Christians.
Yet natural law thought has manifested itself in non-Christian set-
tings, too. Plato, Aristotle, and Cicero are pre-Christian thinkers but remain
major reference points for reflection by natural law thinkers. Both the medi-
eval Jewish philosopher Maimonides (1138–1204) and the early modern
Jewish thinker Moses Mendelssohn (1729–1786) articulated ethical theories
with recognizably natural law characteristics. In the twentieth century, the

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American legal philosopher Lon L. Fuller (1902–1978) outlined a secular and


procedural theory of natural law.
The fact that natural law has been embraced, developed, and articu-
lated by people from dissimilar cultural settings and religious beliefs tells us
several things about natural law. The first is that it cannot be viewed as simply
a handmaiden to Christianity. Natural law, as we will see, is broadly congru-
ent with the idea that all humans possess reason, and that, as C.S. Lewis once
wrote, “human beings, all over the earth, have this curious idea that they ought
to behave in a certain way, and cannot really get rid of it” (Lewis, 1952/2012:
8). This has led many to believe that this reason has been imbued in humans
by God, who himself is understood, at least in Jewish and Christian thought,
as embodying the quality of Divine Reason, as captured in the Greek concept
of Logos (Gregg, 2019).
The idea of natural law holds that all people, whatever their ethnicity,
culture, or religion, can know the difference between good and evil, right and
wrong. The idea, for example, of the Golden Rule—do unto others as you
would have them do unto you—is understood as a principle of moral conduct
that everyone can know. While such beliefs are applied to different and chang-
ing conditions and problems, the core principles always apply.
A second feature of natural law is that its proponents have, at least
since the time of Aquinas, understood themselves as working within a tradi-
tion that traverses the centuries. Early modern Protestant natural law scholars
like Grotius and Samuel von Pufendorf (1632–1694), for example, knew the
works of Aquinas as well as texts written by their Catholic contemporaries
such as Suárez.
This points to a broader point about natural law. It is not a static
tradition of thought. It has developed over time, partly through natural law
theorists clarifying particular concepts, and partly through its proponents
responding to ongoing intellectual challenges to its positions and changes in
the realm of politics, society, and the economy. Whether it was the encounter
between Europeans and the peoples of the New World in the late fifteenth
century, or questions about what justice meant in the context of emerging
market economies in the late eighteenth century, natural law scholars have
applied natural law principles to discern how people should choose and act
in these changing contexts.

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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

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investigation of problems and controversies in fields as different as law, phi-


losophy, art, and theology.
The scholastic method involved examining a given subject from oppos-
ing points of view. Typically, the writer would pose a question, give three
arguments contrary to his own position, and then systematically refute each
of the three objections. This type of structured reasoning helped readers focus
on the most important aspects of the question being studied. The objective
was to arrive at rational, intellectually defensible positions that accorded with
practical reason, factual evidence, and the conclusions of accepted authorities.
Among the latter were reputable pre-Christian thinkers like Aristotle and
Cicero, the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures, early Christian scholars (known
as the Church Fathers), as well as, from the thirteenth century onwards, texts
written by Aquinas.
Today the Summa remains the indispensable reference point for those
working in the natural law tradition or who want to learn more about it. This
is especially true of Part II of the Summa. Divided itself into two sections—
the Prima Secundae and the Secunda Secundae—this part of the Summa
addresses critical questions such as the nature of human reason, the principles
of morality, the character of justice, the origins and limits of government, the
relationship of positive law (law decreed or promulgated by political or legal
institutions with the authority to do so) to natural law, and the virtues. These
are the sections to which natural law scholars—religious, secular, Catholic,
Protestant, Jewish, Aristotelian, or Muslim—interested in exploring topics
like the nature and limits of state power, or the character of property, con-
tinually turn.
Aquinas’s period in Italy came to an end when the Dominicans reas-
signed him back to the University of Paris. Three years after arriving in Paris,
Aquinas was sent back to Naples by his order with the charge of establishing
a studium generale (a house of learning) and filling it with suitable staff. Two
years later, on March 7, 1274, Aquinas died, leaving the Summa incomplete,
but having written more than eight and a half million words over the course
of his life in very precise Latin.
Two particular points are worth highlighting about Aquinas’s work.
The first is that his thought was engaged in a conversation which went beyond
the confines of medieval Catholicism. His writings embraced reflection
upon classical thinkers of Greece, especially Plato (c.428–348 BC), Socrates

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The Essential Natural Law  d 5 

(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:

Any activity is to be pursued in a way appropriate to its purpose.


Disputations have one or other of two purposes.

One is designed [ordinatur] to remove doubts about whether such-


and-such is so. In disputations of this sort you should above all use
authorities acceptable to those with whom you are disputing; with
Jews, for example, you should appeal to the authority of the Old
Testament; with Manichees, who reject the Old Testament, you
should use only the New; with Christians who have split off from
us, e.g., the Greek [Orthodox], who accept both Testaments but
reject the teaching of our [Catholic] Saints, you should rely on the
authority of the Old and New Testaments and those of the Church
teachers [doctores] they do accept. And if you are disputing with
people who accept no authority, you must resort to natural reasons.

Then there is the professorial academic disputation, designed not


for removing error but for teaching, so that those listening may
be led to an understanding of the truth with which the professor
[magister] is concerned. And here you must rely upon reasons,
reasons which track down the root of the truth and create a real
knowledge of how it is that your assertions are true. Otherwise,
if professors settle questions by bare authorities, listeners are

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6  d  The Essential Natural Law

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)

This long citation points to Aquinas’s conviction that natural law is


truly universal in its capacity to engage people from a potentially endless
number of backgrounds if—and this is a considerable “if ”—they are willing
to embrace principles of moral reasoning potentially knowable by all people.

Early modern, late, or second scholasticism


A second natural law source upon which this book draws consists of a group
of thinkers known as “early modern scholastics” or “late scholastics,” and
who are often described as part of “second scholasticism.” They emerged in
Europe in the early modern period, broadly understood as the late sixteenth
century stretching to the mid-eighteenth century, and represented a “second”
or “late” flourishing of scholasticism and the scholastic method before becom-
ing largely dormant in the second half of the eighteenth century. Like Aquinas,
these scholastics were primarily in the business of explaining the doctrines
of Christian faith to seminarians, clergy, and educated lay people. This latter
category might include anyone ranging from devout and intellectually curious
individuals to state officials who, living in a Christian world before and after
the Reformation, needed to be aware of what might be the church’s position
on any given subject.
Where these scholastics differed from Aquinas and other medieval
scholastics was that some of them were Protestant, all were dealing with a
number of new conditions that became pressing in the early modern period,
and they invested more time studying the historical context and empirical
dimension of the issues that concerned them.
In the wake of the Reformation in the sixteenth century, Western
Europe found itself religiously divided in ways that exacerbated existing politi-
cal tensions. It was also a period in which commerce (already vibrant in medi-
eval Europe) began accelerating and Europeans encountered peoples hitherto
unknown to them in the Far East and the Americas. All this was overlaid by
the emergence of monarchical absolutism as a system of government across

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The Essential Natural Law  d 7 

much of continental Europe. This development raised immediate and urgent


questions about freedom and the limits of state power.
In the midst of all these changes, two groups of scholastic thinkers
began asking what reason required people to do in these conditions. The first
were Catholic theologians and canonists (church lawyers). Some were associ-
ated with the aforementioned Dominican order. Others belonged to the most
prominent post-Reformation religious order, the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits).
Located in Italy, modern-day Belgium, and especially Spain, many of these
Dominicans and Jesuits studied and taught at the University of Salamanca
in Spain.
Dominican and Jesuit scholastics focused much of their attention on
some very practical problems. For example, Francisco de Vitoria (1483–1546)
wrote extensively about natural law’s applicability to the idea of international
law, the concept of “just wars,” and liberty of commerce within and across
sovereign boundaries. Similarly, Suárez developed a philosophy of law that
involved some modification of Aquinas’s positions but which also took aim at
the idea of the Divine Right of Kings, which Protestant and Catholic monarchs
had embraced as they sought to consolidate their hold on power. Others, like
the theologian Martín de Azpilcueta (1491–1586) and Jesuits such as Juan de
Mariana (1536–1624) and Luis de Molina (1535–1600), addressed economic
questions in depth. These included topics like the right use of money or what
constituted a just price.
The second group of natural law thinkers from this period relevant
to our discussion are Protestant scholars, especially Grotius, Pufendorf, and
Vattel. These philosophers are often presented as disassociating natural law
from theology. That is not quite true. As noted, Aquinas thought it entirely
possible and often necessary to make arguments based upon natural reason
alone. Moreover, Grotius, Pufendorf, and Vattel believed that God’s existence
and providence is rationally provable and they happily engaged in theological
reflection and disputation.
For our purposes, their importance lies in the fact that, like their early
modern Catholic counterparts, these Protestant natural law philosophers
explored the implications of natural law for some of the specific challenges
of their time. They were particularly interested in exploring the rights and
obligations of individuals to each other as well as the state. This led them
into long reflections on the nature and limits of natural rights, and making

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8  d  The Essential Natural Law

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.

Twentieth century natural rights and natural law


The last group of thinkers upon which this text draws are natural law scholars
who became prominent in the twentieth century. A major focus of individu-
als such as the French philosopher Jacques Maritain (1882–1973) and the
American legal theorist Lon L. Fuller (1902–1978) was on articulating theories
of natural law that provided philosophically defensible foundations for natural
rights. This helped to furnish an apparatus for thinking about the political and
legal institutions necessary for promoting freedom and justice.
There are differences of background, methodology, and focus between
these thinkers. Most were Catholic, some were Protestant, and others were
secular. But what matters is that all were writing in periods in which two things
were happening. First, totalitarian and authoritarian regimes of a fascist and
Communist nature had come to power. Second, natural law was being eclipsed
in legal philosophy and practice by alternative legal theories like legal positiv-
ism, associated with legal scholars such as Hans Kelsen.
In general terms, legal positivism holds that law is primarily a matter
of social fact enacted or decreed by legitimate authority. For a law to be law,
according to legal positivists, what matters is not so much its ethical rightness
or wrongness but whether 1) it meets established criteria in terms of the ways
in which the law is or will be created and enforced, and 2) its effectiveness in
achieving its objective. The law is simply “posited” by the state rather than
being derived from or reflecting the application of natural law.

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The potential for such thinking to become a threat to freedom and


justice was underscored during the 1946 Nuremberg war crimes trials of
the surviving leaders of the National Socialist regime. During the trial, one
defense that many of the accused articulated was that everything done on
their orders had been directly or indirectly sanctioned by the German state.
The law was the law, and the moral rightness or wrongness of the law was
consequently not relevant.
The prosecution responded by maintaining that while this may have
been the case, such actions were not only rendered illegal by international
law, but were called into question by strong Western legal philosophical tradi-
tions which emphasized that there are indeed universal laws which no posi-
tive law (no matter how firmly sanctioned by the state) can annul. The chief
Nuremberg prosecutor, Justice Robert H. Jackson (a Justice of the United
States Supreme Court and a firm believer in natural law), contended that the
International Military Tribunal sought to “[rise] above the provincial and
transient and [sought] guidance not only from international law but also from
the basic principles of jurisprudence which are assumptions of civilization
and which long have found embodiment in the codes of all nations” (Jackson,
1947: part 2, 29). This was Jackson’s roundabout way of saying that a law made
by the state which violated basic norms of justice—by declaring, for instance,
that German Jews were to be accorded fewer protections under the law than
other Germans simply because they were Jewish—was no law at all because
such a law violated the natural law potentially knowable by all people.
The experience of totalitarianism led to a renewed emphasis on human
rights after World War II, as expressed in the United Nations Declaration of
Human Rights adopted by the United Nations General Assembly and pub-
lished in 1948. But this new attention to rights was accompanied by two other
developments.
First, the language of rights came to be increasingly deployed far
beyond the scope of anything ever articulated by natural law theorists and
often in ways that demanded the extensive use of state authority to advance
particular understandings of what is often called “social justice.” The sec-
ond half of the twentieth century witnessed the emergence of what the legal
scholar Mary Ann Glendon (1991) famously called “rights talk”: the ten-
dency to reduce all political issues to assertions and conflicts of rights. At
the same time, modern liberal thinkers like Ronald Dworkin were arguing

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10  d  The Essential Natural Law

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

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The Essential Natural Law  d 11 

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.

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Chapter 1

What is Natural Law?

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,

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14  d  The Essential Natural Law

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.

Right reason and truth


How then do we know these principles? Natural law holds that people pos-
sess a basic knowledge of these principles through their possession of reason

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The Essential Natural Law  d 15 

(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.

The ethics of human action


Natural law is thus neither social science nor political theory. Instead, natu-
ral law is primarily ethics insofar as it is concerned with practical reasoning
about how individuals and communities do good and avoid evil when making
choices and acting. Aquinas put it this way:

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16  d  The Essential Natural Law

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).

To understand what Aquinas is driving at, we need to ask ourselves:


how do we identify a good reason for action; that is, something that requires
no other reference to another purpose because our reason tells us that some-
thing is self-evidently good for human beings?
Let’s take the case of someone who exercises to reduce excessive
weight. Losing excessive weight is a good reason to act. But it is only intel-
ligibly good because it contributes to being healthy and staying alive. The free
choice to exercise presupposes that human life is a fundamental good to be
promoted and protected. Life is therefore an ultimate reason to act.
Another example of a self-evident good—a reason for action that
needs no further explanation—might be “religion.” Imagine someone leaving
his house on a Saturday. Why, we ask, is he doing so? If the answer is “he is
going to synagogue,” we may inquire, “why is he attending synagogue?” If the
response is “because he is a religious Jew,” we may further inquire, “why does
he choose to practice his Judaism?”
At this point, we could mention factors like upbringing, a desire to see
friends, express his identity, etc. But one answer to the question of why the
man chooses to go to synagogue that requires no further explanation is that
Judaism is his religion.
At some point in their life, most people ask themselves, with varying
degrees of intensity and seriousness, 1) whether there is a God (or gods);
2) whether it is reasonable to believe in his (or their) existence; 3) which
religion’s account of God is more compelling than others; and 4) what our
conclusions about these questions mean for the way that we live our lives.
People want to know the true answers to these questions. That includes those
who conclude that, upon asking such questions, there is no God.
Thus, to continue with our example, the man’s choice to go to syna-
gogue ultimately results from his choice to reflect reasonably upon the truth
of whether or not there is an ultimate transcendent source that stands at the
beginning of time and who set the universe in motion. Having concluded

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The Essential Natural Law  d 17 

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

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18  d  The Essential Natural Law

simultaneously study (the good of knowledge) while running a marathon (the


good of skillful performance). Our choice of one good over another inevita-
bly means that we do not participate in other goods through that particular
choice. This is an unintended side-effect that we foresee will result from our
action but we do not choose it.

Reason and free choice


Plainly, natural law places great emphasis on the fact that all human beings
act. Reflection on human actions, it holds, leads us to recognize that they are
more than simply the result of human biology or instinct. Certainly, there are
acts, like the working of our internal organs, which reflect our biology. But
what makes human actions different from those of other creatures are two
elements which, taken together, make such actions free.
As noted, one such element is our possession of reason. An element
of rational logic is required if people are to act freely in a deliberative manner.
This point becomes clearer if we consider an insane person’s actions. Though
her actions are not coerced, we do not consider her actions to be freely chosen
precisely because the person’s rationality is impaired. For centuries, legal systems
have permitted defendants to enter the plea of “not guilty by reason of insanity.”
People may thus claim that they were not responsible for their actions because
their will was not shaped by reason. It follows that unless reason guides the
will, there is no free choice; and without free choice, we cannot be regarded as
responsible for our actions.
By itself, however, reason is insufficient to make human acts free. Many
machines made by humans (like computers) have a type of intelligence built
into them. Yet few would claim that a computer is free. For machines do not
possess another specifically human characteristic of human action: i.e., free
choice.
Unless one accepts that humans can make choices, it is impossible
to understand distinctly human action. While an animal can be taught to
behave in certain ways, humans’ capacity for choice allows us to settle upon
and implement a course of action, and then choose a different form of action:
to drink a glass of whisky now, and then go surfing afterwards. A human act
thus amounts to what is chosen.
This, however, does not settle an important question. Can humans
make truly free choices? Many say no. Some regard choices as resulting from

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a combination of a person’s environment, emotions, genetics, and brainwaves.


From this standpoint, people may have the sense that they are freely making
choices but, in reality, free choice is an illusion.
Natural law contests this position. Aquinas argues that practical rea-
son allows us to identify reasons for action. Reason allows us, for example,
to resolve medical problems. Reason also tells us, however, that we should
try and solve medical questions. Why? Because the preservation and promo-
tion of life and health are good reasons for us to act—they require no further
explanation—and, in that sense, are self-evident.
This idea is at the root of the vision of free choice outlined by Aquinas:
that is, of human intelligence in action. This is a person’s will working as an
intelligent response to what someone comprehends as an opportunity to act.
“For one’s will is in one’s intelligence,” Aquinas wrote, and “the source of
this sort of appetite is understanding, i.e., the intellectual act that is some-
how moved by something intelligible” (Aquinas, 1270–1272, Sententia super
Metaphysican, XII, 7, in Busa, 1996). The ultimate source of human actions—
their motivation—are thus reasons; that is, something intelligible.
People make free choices when—having judged that they have a rea-
son or reasons to agree to one possible act, and a reason or reasons to adopt
alternative but opposing options for action—they choose one option instead
of the others. Once a person formally chooses a possibility, it becomes a plan
for action. Putting this into effect is what Aquinas calls “command” [impe-
rium] (ST I-II, q.17, a.1).
Natural law thus sees free choice as (1) the contemplation of possibili-
ties that provide reasons for action, followed by (2) the active determination of
the value of the object of a possible act, and then (3) the active willing of that
act (Finnis, 1998: 71). This view of free choice and reason suggests that humans
can make free choices to the extent that we understand and act upon reasons
that are not reducible to the emotions, the influence of our environment, etc.
It is not that natural law views something like emotions as unimport-
ant. The felt strength of an emotion can be a sign of one’s commitment to
good reasons to act. Aquinas observed that sometimes “good desires work
against a perverse reason” (ST II-II, q.155, a.1. ad.2). In some cases, emotions
may even reflect our inner awareness of the wrongness of rationalizing a bad
choice. Nevertheless, natural law maintains that feelings must be subordinated
to reason when it comes to making a free choice. While we can describe the

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20  d  The Essential Natural Law

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.

Freedom, morality, and virtue


There is another way in which natural law attaches deep significance to free
choice. This concerns the effects of our actions.
Much of the time we think about our actions in terms of the effects that
they may have upon others or the material world. But natural law stresses that
our choices also have an effect on our own character. This difference may be
described in terms of what are called the “transitive” and “intransitive” dimen-
sions of human acts. Aquinas explains this in the following way:

Action is of two sorts: one sort—action [actio] in a strict sense—


issues from the agent into something external to change it... the
other sort—properly called activity [operatio]—does not issue into
something external but remains within the agent itself perfecting
it (Aquinas, 1256-1259/1952: q.8, a.6c).

The transitive effect of an act is what occurs outside us as a result of


the action. When I work, for instance, I shape other people and things. But the
intransitive effect of the same act leaves a mark on me as a person. My very same
act of work, for example, shapes me internally in terms of reinforcing certain
good habits (virtues) or certain bad habits (vices), depending on the act. While
the intransitive effects of my work may not be at the forefront of my mind
when I choose to work one way rather than another, it is an unavoidable effect
of any freely chosen act. This free choice lasts within people until they decide
to act in a way incompatible with that choice.
This is how people develop habits of action. The more we choose to
steal, for example, the more accustomed we become to stealing. To break this
bad habit, we need to repudiate our past choices to steal and start performing
actions incompatible with stealing. One person may thus choose through her
actions to renounce a past life of crime, while another weakens her virtuous
habits by suddenly starting to make unreasonable choices.

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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

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22  d  The Essential Natural Law

(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.

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This commitment to moral absolutes in the form of exceptionless


norms puts natural law directly at odds with those forms of ethics that either
1) seek to determine the right course of action based on a weighing of all know-
able (and unknowable) good and evil effects of an action; or 2) try to establish
criteria by which we can judge the rightness of a given way of acting based
on a calculation of foreseeable consequences deriving from a given choice.
Jeremy Bentham, for example, argued that moral decision-making
involves people weighing all the possible pleasures and pains proceeding from
a variety of possible actions, and assessing which act is likely to maximize the
most pleasure. But Bentham offers no morally objective criteria to establish
what is greater pleasure or lesser pain. This means that, in the process of
weighing, it is very difficult to stop people from quickly drifting in the direc-
tion of choosing whatever it is they happen to want based upon their feelings
and passions rather than according to reason (Finnis, 1991: 18).
Those ethicists who adhere to what is called “consequentialism” take
a somewhat different approach. Recognizing the problems associated with
the type of calculus proposed by Bentham, they seek to establish criteria
according to which we can decide what to do (especially in what are called
hard cases) on the basis of a rational assessment of 1) all the consequences
that flow from an act and 2) all the intrinsic goods that are part of that act.
The act that is to be chosen is one in which all the possible good consequences
and intrinsic goods realized outweigh all the possible bad consequences and
intrinsic goods realized.
Natural law thinkers point out that it is impossible for anyone to know
all the possible consequences of their actions (indeed, economists remind us
that our choices also have many unknown consequences). Moreover, how do
we weigh the significance of one consequence against, say, two other con-
sequences? Consequentialism, natural law ethics holds, subsequently ends
up arbitrarily assigning some amount of value to a particular consequence,
and another amount of value to other consequences. Consequentialism thus
leads to haphazard, arbitrary, and thus unreasonable decision-making in the
realm of morality.
The same methodological problem arises with comparing and weigh-
ing all the different intrinsic goods potentially realized by two different actions.
By what criteria do we establish that one realization of the good of truth out-
weighs two realizations of the good of work? In this regard, consequentialism

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24  d  The Essential Natural Law

runs afoul of what is called the problem of incommensurability: trying to


weigh and compare what cannot be weighed and compared.
Natural law is not indifferent to the importance of consequences. It
does not tell us to ignore the known, albeit unintended consequences of our
actions. It recognizes that our free choices can have many effects, many of
which are knowable but unintended, and in that sense, side-effects of our
choices. There are also instances in which people can reasonably measure
the foreseeable consequences and efficiency of alternative choices. One such
context is a market for those goods and services in which a common denomi-
nator (i.e., money) allows appraisals of costs and benefits. All that natural law
reasoning is stating is that we cannot make an assessment of consequences
the ultimate reference point for decision-making, let alone appeal to conse-
quences in order to justify intrinsically wrong acts like murder or theft.

But what about liberty?


Natural law’s understanding of reason, human action, and human choice is
certainly controversial. Some have questioned whether, for example, knowl-
edge, life, or practical reasonableness are universally recognized across cul-
tures as essential human goods.
To this claim, many natural law theorists respond by noting that there
are few, if any societies that have regarded it as reasonable and good to desire
ignorance for its own sake or that consider it legitimate to murder people.
Though there will be arguments about whether a particular act constitutes
an act of murder, few will affirm murder per se is good.
Other questions about the applicability of natural law arise from the
fact of human sociability. We need others in order to survive and flourish
ourselves. This has implications for our choices. And such choices—whether
they are coordinated through the medium of a contract or via a treaty between
two countries—must, from a natural law standpoint, be as reasonable and just
as all our other choices.
Natural law is cognizant that our opportunities to choose the good
and live virtuously can be bolstered or limited by the conditions surrounding
us. Even if we lived in a society in which everyone only made free choices for
the good, many of those choices would still be incompatible with each other.
Decisions need to be made about how to resolve such conflicts in reason-
able and just ways. The reality that everyone sometimes makes unreasonable

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The Essential Natural Law  d 25 

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.

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26  d  The Essential Natural Law

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Chapter 2

Rights and 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.

From “ius” to rights


One concept that proved critical to the natural law treatment of rights was
that of ius. Although the word ius first acquired momentum in Roman law,
there are many debates about its precise meaning in the Roman texts. It is
with Aquinas and later scholastics, most notably the Spanish Jesuit Francisco
Suárez, that ius began taking on the character of what would be understood
as “rights” today.
In Aquinas’s treatment of justice, ius means “the just thing in itself ”
(ST II-II, q.57, a.2). The context of this statement establishes that by “thing”
Aquinas means acts, objects, and states of affairs which are the subject matter
of relationships of justice between people (ST II-II, q.57, a1.c, ad 1 and ad 2).
More than three centuries later, Suárez approached the topic in a
slightly different way. In his De Legibus, he extended Aquinas’s concept of

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28  d  The Essential Natural Law

ius to embrace persons themselves. According to Suárez, “the true, strict


and proper meaning” of ius is “a kind of moral power which every man has,
either over his own property or with respect to what is due to him” (Suárez,
1612/2012a: I, ii, 5). Ius, then, is something that a person is owed either as a
liberty or an entitlement of justice.
It’s important to recognize here that Suárez was working out these
ideas in the context of his critique of what was called the Divine Right of
Kings. This theological and political theory held that monarchs were not
subject to the will of the political community, regardless of whether that will
was expressed directly by all members of a community or indirectly through
a parliament or assembly. Instead, monarchs were only answerable to God.
Suárez contested this position. He argued that the state arose from a
type of pact on the part of its members to assist each other by guaranteeing
certain freedoms and ways of realizing justice and who, on this basis, freely
consent to subordinating themselves to a political authority. Consequently,
Suárez’s concept of rights serves to ensure that sight is not lost of particular
freedoms and protections that are owed, as a matter of right, to individuals
in a political community (Suárez, 1612/2012a: V, 7, 3).
This stress upon rights as something pertaining to individual persons
was further underlined by Suárez’s Protestant contemporary, Hugo Grotius.
Grotius identified the deepest meaning of ius as being “a moral quality of a
person, making it possible to have or to do something correctly” (1625/2005:
I.1.4). In Grotius’s view, ius is a power possessed by people that enables them
to make particular choices about their lives, use of their liberty, their property,
and their reputation without facing undue interference or sanctions from the
state. Grotius claimed, for instance, that people enjoy the right to self-pres-
ervation. This means that they have the power to pursue goals and interests
that help them preserve their life and goods in ways compatible with everyone
else’s right to do so—and they do not require the state’s permission to do so.
Grotius (and Pufendorf ) break down these rights into two further
categories (Grotius 1625/2005: II.25.3.3). What they called “perfect rights” are
rights that are strictly enforceable in courts. Perfect rights allow us to make
a direct claim on someone else: that, for instance, someone may not take my
life. “Imperfect rights” are not enforceable in courts. They allow us to give or
be given something lawfully, such as property, but we cannot enforce such a
claim on others via the legal system. Someone in need, for example, may have

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The Essential Natural Law  d 29 

an imperfect right to my charity. The beggar cannot, however, enforce such a


right under the law. Conversely, when I enter into a contract with someone,
she has a perfect right claim on whatever I have promised to give her in that
contract.

Rights versus unjust coercion


Moving forward a few centuries, we see natural law theorists ceasing to use the
imperfect/perfect distinction but nonetheless continuing to attach the idea of
rights to notions of liberty from unwarranted external coercion. A particular
emphasis was also placed on the idea that the state does not create rights.
In the atmosphere of legal positivism that shaped much early- to mid-
twentieth century legal discourse, it became easy for rights to become under-
stood as whatever the state said that they were. And if rights are understood
primarily in terms of whatever has been authorized by the political commu-
nity, their coherence and stability becomes questionable. For if you believe
that rights have no stronger foundation than the state’s exercise of its sover-
eign powers, they may be diminished or even abolished by the state. In such
circumstances, rights would simply be identified—or abolished—according
to whatever a particular majority in a particular country at a particular time
preferred those rights to be.
Twentieth century natural law thinkers consequently underscored the
necessity of grounding rights on a moral foundation that was not subject to
revision or amendment by the state. Jacques Maritain, for instance, insisted
that rights were inviolable insofar as they protected the capacity of individuals
to make choices freely in order to realize particular moral goods and virtues
that are central to human flourishing (Maritain, 1943). Taking natural rights
seriously, for Maritain, thus meant taking natural law seriously.
Let us use the example of religious liberty to show how a right is derived
from the good. Why, it might be asked, do have people have a right to religious
liberty? Some might say that religious belief is a purely subjective matter;
hence, religion belongs to that sphere of personal autonomy with which the
state may not interfere. A pragmatist might claim that we must accord people
the right of religious liberty because it helps to maintain social order.
The natural law case for religious liberty is different to these positions.
It holds that the right to religious liberty is grounded upon the good of reli-
gion, understood as the truth about the transcendent and ultimate meaning

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30  d  The Essential Natural Law

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.

Justice, virtue, and the common good


A distinctive feature of natural law ethics is that it identifies justice as a virtue:
that is, the habit of giving others what they are due. This is to be found in
Aristotle’s treatment of justice which he commences by describing the notion
of general justice. By this, Aristotle meant comprehensive virtue with regard
to relationships with other persons (Aristotle undated/1980: V.1.1129b12–14).
Justice-as-a-virtue was subsequently understood in the natural law tradition
as having a uniquely social dimension in the sense that one of its defining
elements is other-directedness.

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The Essential Natural Law  d 31 

As a virtue, general justice properly understood involves one’s general


willingness to promote what is called the “common good” of the communities
to which one belongs. In natural law theory, common good is not a synonym
for common ownership, let alone collectivism. As far as the political realm is
concerned, the common good consists of those conditions that help promote
the flourishing of individuals and groups within a given political community.
Some of these conditions can be found in the rights affirmed by natural
law. Without some protection of rights like religious liberty or economic free-
dom, the scope for actively pursuing goods like truth or skillful performance
is radically diminished. Other conditions of the common good have an insti-
tutional form. One example is the rule of law. Though it’s not impossible for
people to do good and avoid evil in the absence of the rule of law, it is much
harder without it.
Another element of justice that presents itself very early in the natural
law tradition is that of duty in the sense of what we owe to others. This is
closely associated with a third element: equality. This should not be under-
stood in the sense of equal outcomes or equal starting points in life. Instead
equality means fairness as expressed in the Golden Rule: doing unto others as
you would want them to do to you. And what one should want others to do
unto you is what is reasonable and just—the objective measure that requires
rational impartiality between persons.
These three elements—other-directedness, duty, and the Golden
Rule—are linked and overlap with each other. But attention to all three ele-
ments underscores that the same common good that is the end of general
justice requires more than simply a broad inclination on the part of individuals
and groups to promote the flourishing (in the sense of growing in virtue and
participating in goods like life, work, health, truth, beauty etc.) of others and
themselves. On one level, Aquinas specifies, it is a particular concern of the
rulers since they have a certain responsibility to promote the common good
(Aquinas, 1265-1273/1975: III, c.80, nn.14, 15) of the political community. But
Aquinas also notes that it is a concern of every citizen. Working out how this
common good is realized is how natural law theorists identify the different
types of justice that apply to different relationships in which people engage
different types of rights.

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32  d  The Essential Natural Law

Distributive, commutative, and legal justice


The first of these forms of justice is distributive justice. It embraces the rela-
tionship between individuals and communities when it comes to the distri-
bution of common resources in a just manner, according to criteria such as
merit, function, and need. In the case of distributive justice, there has been
considerable attention paid to its meaning for property arrangements.
The second type of justice is commutative justice. This concerns
relations between individuals and groups engaged in particular exchanges.
Commutative justice has been understood as principally applicable to ques-
tions such as contract and the adjudication of disputes arising within such
relationships.
The question of the stability of the meaning of commutative justice
and distributive justice vis-à-vis each other has always been the cause of much
discussion within the natural law tradition. Consideration of what commuta-
tive justice demands in seeking to determine what two people owe each other
in a set of mutually agreed-upon arrangements often involves, for instance,
reflection upon the criteria associated with distributive justice.
We see such overlaps at work in bankruptcy law (Finnis, 1980: 188-192.
When a business fails, courts charged with determining what individuals and
groups owe each other on the basis of pre-existing agreed-upon contracts
(the realm of commutative justice) invariably end up employing criteria such
as merit, need, and function (the realm of distributive justice) to decide who
gets what from whatever is left of a set of common resources upon which
there are competing claims.
In Aquinas’s thought, all these modes of justice flow from general
justice insofar as they are all ultimately derived from everyone’s responsibil-
ity to the common good. For some time after Aquinas, however, the natural
law tradition lost sight of this point. This is apparent in the attempt by early
modern natural law thinkers like Thomas Cajetan (1469-1534) to clarify the
relationship between general, commutative, and distributive justice. Cajetan
specified that:

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:

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The Essential Natural Law  d 33 

legal, distributive and commutative. For legal justice orientates


the parts to the whole, distributive the whole to the parts while
commutative orients the parts one to another. (Cajetan, 1518: II-II,
q.61, a.1, cited in Finnis, 1980: 1985)

Notice how Cajetan essentially places general, distributive, and commutative


justice on the same level. Unlike Aquinas, he does not posit general justice as
the foundation of the other modes of justice. The effect of this was to gradually
separate commutative and distributive justice from the demands of general
justice, thereby narrowing the scope of commutative and distributive justice.
Commutative justice came to be seen as strictly limited to dealings between
two or more private parties and not derived from the concern for the common
good to which general justice points. Likewise, distributive justice became
focused strictly upon the relationship primarily between the individual and
the state when it came to the allocation of material resources, rather than the
multiple relationships that exist between individuals, numerous non-state
communities, and political and legal institutions.

And social justice?


It is in this context that the idea of social justice developed within the natural
law tradition from the mid-nineteenth century onwards as a way of trying to
address these problems. As demonstrated by Paul Dominique Dognin (1961),
Catholic natural law thinkers deployed the term social justice to restore gen-
eral justice to its central place in the natural law tradition’s treatment of jus-
tice. This was given direct expression by Pope Pius XI in his 1937 encyclical
condemning Communism, Divini Redemptoris:

Now it is of the very essence of social justice to demand for each


individual all that is necessary for the common good. But just as
in the living organism it is impossible to provide for the good of
the whole unless each single part and each individual member
is given what it needs for the exercise of its proper functions,
so it is impossible to care for the social organism and the good
of society as a unit unless each single part and each individual
member—that is to say, each individual man in the dignity of his

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34  d  The Essential Natural Law

human personality—is supplied with all that is necessary for the


exercise of his social functions (Pius XI, 1937: 55).

The context of these remarks is a discussion of the relationship between


employers and employees. But the broader point being made here is that
everyone must go beyond excessively narrow conceptions of commutative
justice when thinking about what justice requires. Instead, they must take into
account conditions outside this particular relationship which affect the wider
community. The reference to the common good serves to specify this as the
goal of social justice, thereby reestablishing general justice as foundational to
natural law reasoning about these matters.
Within the natural law tradition, social justice is thus the habit or
disposition to be committed to promoting the conditions that promote the
well-being of others. This takes us full-circle back to the idea of justice as a
virtue. And virtues, as previously noted, are only realized when a person freely
commits himself to choosing the good. It follows that a pre-condition for
realizing social justice is a high degree of free self-determination. To realize
social justice in this sense means that, at some level, I must decide freely to
commit myself to the well-being of others and to the common good—and I
must do so continuously.
This leaves us, however, with an important question. How does natural
law conceive of the state’s role in promoting the common good? Does concern
for the common good give government officials a license to do more or less
whatever they deem necessary to ensure that the conditions that facilitate
human choices for fundamental goods prevail. As we will see in the next
chapter, the natural law answer to that question is a firm “no.”

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Chapter 3

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.

The political common good


Natural law understands the political common good as consisting of all
those conditions in a given political community (like the Commonwealth of
Australia, the State of Michigan, or the City of Montreal) that tend to favour,

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36  d  The Essential Natural Law

facilitate, and foster the coherent participation of each individual in goods


like truth, work, and beauty, which are self-evidently good for all humans.
Note that a particular characteristic of the political community’s com-
mon good is that it is not the all-inclusive end for its members. Rather it is
instrumental insofar as it is directed to assisting the flourishing of persons by
fostering the conditions that facilitate—as opposed to try and directly real-
ize—the free choice of its members to flourish.
The ways in which the legitimate authorities of a political community
serve this end might include, among others, interacting with other legitimate
political authorities, protecting the members of the political community from
hostile outsiders, vindicating justice by punishing wrongdoers, and defining
and adjudicating the responsibilities associated with particular relationships,
such as contractual duties. It is harder, for example, to choose to pursue the
good of knowledge in a situation of civil disorder. Likewise, we know that the
incentives for us to work are radically diminished if there is no guarantee that
our earnings will not be arbitrarily confiscated by others or the state.
It’s important, however, to remember that all this is about assisting
people to flourish, and that helping individuals and associations in a given
political community means precisely that: helping. The state does not assist
individuals and communities by dulling, usurping, or annulling their ability
and personal responsibility to make the free choices that actualize human
flourishing. In short, the activities and powers of the political authorities are
themselves limited by the rationale for a political community. This means that
the goal of the political common good is not the all-round moral fulfillment
of every member of that community. The political common good thus limits
what state officials may do in a given political community. That includes the
realm of what is called public morality.

Natural law, the state, and morality


Natural law’s approach to the topic of the state’s role concerning public moral-
ity is grounded on three pivotal points.
First, natural law holds that all human-made law (positive law) has a
moral dimension. Even something as mundane as traffic regulations is under-
stood as possessing an underlying moral logic. Traffic laws rightly regulate the
free choices of millions of people to drive, because without such laws goods

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The Essential Natural Law  d 37 

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:

Because human law is ordained for the civil community, implying


mutual duties of man and his fellows: and men are ordained to
one another by outward acts, whereby men live in communion
with one another. This life in common of man with man pertains

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38  d  The Essential Natural Law

to justice, whose proper function consists in directing the human


community. Wherefore human law makes precepts only about
acts of justice …. (ST I-II q.100 a.2c)

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:

The species of virtues are distinguished by their objects… Now


all the objects of virtues can be referred either to the private good
of an individual, or to the common good of the multitude: Thus,
matters of fortitude may be achieved either for the safety of the
state, or for upholding the rights of a friend, and in like manner
with the other virtues. But law… is ordained to the common good.
Wherefore there is no virtue whose acts cannot be prescribed by
the law. Nevertheless human law does not prescribe concerning
all the acts of every virtue: but only in regard to those that are
ordainable to the common good—either immediately, as when
certain things are done directly for the common good—or medi-
ately, as when a lawgiver prescribes certain things pertaining to
good order, whereby the citizens are directed in the upholding of
the common good of justice and peace (ST I-II, q.96 a.3c).

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.

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The Essential Natural Law  d 39 

Subsidiarity and the state


This does not exhaust the ways in which natural law restricts the scope of state
power. Not only does the political common good limit what the state may do
vis-à-vis individuals; it also constrains what the state may do concerning the
freedom of the communities over which it exercises authority.
One way of understanding this is through the natural law concept of
subsidiarity. The word itself is derived from the Latin subsidium, meaning “to
assist.” This idea was partially formulated by Aquinas when he commented,
“it is contrary to the proper character of the state’s government to impede
people from acting according to their responsibilities—except in emergencies”
(Aquinas, 1265-1273/1975: III c.71, n.4). An example of such an emergency
might be when the government requires my business to provide certain goods
to the military in time of war, even if doing so makes me unable to fulfil my
contractual obligations to supply the same goods to private actors. In this
case, the state’s responsibility to protect the country from external aggressors
rightly overrides my personal obligations.
The principle of subsidiarity thus reminds us that there are numer-
ous free associations and communities which precede the state and establish
many of the conditions that assist people to achieve perfection. They thus
have a primary responsibility to give others what they are objectively owed
in justice. The way this works in practice was outlined by John Paul II in his
1991 encyclical Centesimus Annus. It states:

a community of a higher order should not interfere in the internal


life of a community of a lower order, depriving the latter of its
functions, but rather should support it in case of need and help
to co-ordinate its activity with the activities of the rest of society,
always with a view to the common good (John Paul II, 1991: 48).

The same encyclical further clarifies that

Such supplementary interventions, which are justified by urgent


reasons touching the common good, must be as brief as possible,
so as to avoid removing permanently from society and business
systems the functions which are properly theirs, and so as to
avoid enlarging excessively the sphere of State intervention to

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40  d  The Essential Natural Law

the detriment of both economic and civil freedom. (John Paul


II, 1991: 48)

The interventions of higher communities, such as the state, in the


activities of lower bodies should therefore be made with reference to the
political common good: i.e., the conditions that enable all persons to make
the free choices through which they fulfill themselves. Subsidiarity thus com-
bines axioms of non-interference and assistance. It follows that when a case of
assistance and co-ordination through law or the government proves necessary,
as much respect as possible should be accorded to the rightful liberties of the
assisted person or community.
The primary significance of this principle thus lies in the fact that such
liberties are essential if people are to choose freely moral goods and virtues:
i.e., through acting and doing things for ourselves—as the fruit of our own
reflection, choices, and acts—rather than have others do them for us.
Subsidiarity thus suggests that the state may intervene directly only
when it is clear there is no other association or community in closer proximity
to those with a particular need, or that all other associations and communi-
ties have failed to meet the need. And even in those instances when the state
appears to be the only institution capable of meeting the need, the principle
of subsidiarity suggests that once a non-state community or association has
emerged which is capable of addressing the need, the state should allow that
association to assume responsibility for fulfilling this need.
At the same time, there are particular responsibilities that natural law
does regard as the state’s prerogative. Perhaps the most important of these is
something that free societies see as fundamental to their very identity: rule
of law.

Reason and the rule of law


Aquinas specified that the rule of law is “not the rule of men” (Aquinas,
Sententia Libri Ethicorum, V.11 n.10 in Busa, 1996). By “rule of law,” Aquinas
did not primarily mean that those charged with administering the law simply
upheld established rules consistently. Rule of law was, for Aquinas, a matter of
acting according to reason rather than our passions or in an arbitrary fashion.
Aquinas believed that law should determine as far in advance as
possible what judges should decide (Aquinas, 1271-1272, Sententia Libri

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The Essential Natural Law  d 41 

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).

Unless, for instance, a law is clear and promulgated, it fails to meet a


basic requirement of reason and is therefore unjust. Note, however, that this
requirement is not simply a technical precondition for a functioning legal
system. It contains an inner reasonableness insofar as these requirements
testify that there are coherent and just (reasonable) and incoherent and unjust
(unreasonable) ways of applying laws. Hence, it is through conforming to these
basic principles of reasonability that law meets the minimal requirements of

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42  d  The Essential Natural Law

justice and makes a vital contribution to freedom from unjust coercion and
arbitrary decision-making by those wielding legitimate coercive power.

From law to the economy


Natural law’s conception of limited government and rule of law relies heavily
upon the notion that protecting the ability of individuals and communities
to make free choices cannot be grounded on a notion of freedom detached
from reason, or the idea of liberty for the sake of autonomy. The same logic
manifests itself in an area to which natural law thinkers have long devoted
considerable attention: the realm of property and economic relations.

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Chapter 4

Property and the Economy

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.

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44  d  The Essential Natural Law

Private property as the means for common use


Natural law’s treatment of issues of property begins with the observation the
earth and all it contains is to be used by and on behalf of all people, in the sense
that nothing is predestined to be used by any one person or group (Grisez, 1993:
790). To that extent, the use of material goods is “common.”
Common use should thus not be understood as a type of end-state of
affairs in which a perfect distribution of material wealth is achieved once and
for all and never changes. This would be to deny the truth and necessity of
human freedom and the fact that people’s responsibilities, obligations, and
holdings of wealth are in a constant state of flux. What matters is that mate-
rial goods are used in ways that enhance the conditions that promote the
flourishing of every person and community.
So how do we give effect to the principle of common use? Natural law’s
response has been that it is usually realized through private ownership—so
much so that private possession of property isn’t just permissible; it is usually
essential for realizing this goal. Natural law’s condemnation of theft can be
understood as pointing towards this conclusion, and helps to establish private
property as something that is an immediate derivation of natural law.
Aquinas drew upon Aristotle to outline three reasons to favour the
private ownership of material goods. First, he notes, people tend to take better
care of what is theirs than of what is common to everyone, since individuals
tend to shirk responsibilities that belong to nobody in particular. Second,
if everyone were responsible for everything, the result would be confusion.
Third, dividing up things generally produces a more peaceful state of affairs. By
contrast, sharing things in common often results in tension. Individual own-
ership, then—understood as the power to manage and dispose of things—is
legitimate and necessary (ST II-II, q.66, a.2).
Nevertheless, natural law doesn’t regard private ownership of material
goods as absolute. In the first place, private ownership is a means of ensuring
common use and that material goods serve humanity. Aquinas himself specified
that “if the need be so manifest and urgent that it is evident that the present
need must be remedied by whatever means be at hand (for instance when a
person is in some imminent danger, and there is no other possible remedy), then
it is lawful for a man to succor his own need by means of another’s property”
(ST II-II, q.66, a.7).

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This is not an endorsement of theft. What it means is that if a particular


manifestation of private property is actually obstructing common use, then
the ownership of that property is no longer private. An example is someone
who is starving to death and on the point of death and whose only opportu-
nity to save her life is by eating an apple on a tree belonging to someone else.
Elsewhere Aquinas provides a clearer indication of what constitutes
“imminent danger.” In discussing almsgiving, he states that “it is not every sort
of need that binds us as a matter of strict obligation, but only what is a matter
of life and death” (ST II-II, q.32, a.5).
Later natural law thinkers broadly follow Aquinas’s treatment of com-
mon use and private ownership. But different dimensions of this teaching
were stressed more than others.
One early modern scholastic, Tomas de Mercado (1530–1576), sharp-
ened Aquinas’s point about the way in which private ownership encouraged
personal responsibility by highlighting how it also encouraged people to be
more productive and creative in their use of their property. He noted that
people tend to be more naturally inclined to care for their own home rather
than the homes of others. “If universal love,” Mercado wrote, “will not induce
people to take care of their things, then private interest will. Hence private
goods will multiply. Had they remained in common possession, the opposite
will be true” (Mercado, 1571/1975: bk.2, ch.2, fol.19).
One also sees more extensive critiques of common ownership during
the period of the second scholasticism of the sixteenth and seventeeth centu-
ries. Domingo de Soto (1494–1560) repeated Aquinas’s criticism of common
ownership, but stressed other particular negative features of such collectiv-
ized property arrangements. Common ownership, he maintained, tended to
corrode the virtue of liberality (generosity), not least because “those who own
nothing cannot be liberal” (de Soto, 1553-1554/1968: bk.4, q.3, fol.105-6).
Other scholastics, such as Juan de Mariana, underlined the abuses
associated with common ownership. Speaking of his own religious order (the
Jesuits), he exclaimed, “Certainly it is natural for people to spend much more
when they are supplied in common than when they have to obtain things on
their own. The extent of our common expenses is unbelievable!” (Mariana,
1605/1950a: 604).
Martín de Azpilcueta maintained that, even in cases of extreme need,
it was not proven “that extreme need makes the needy the absolute owner of

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46  d  The Essential Natural Law

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

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particular human being. Property needs therefore to be secured by some type


of human action—specifically “by human labor and more closely adapted for
human purposes” (Carmichael, 1724/2002: 94).
On this basis, Carmichael identified different categories of property
rights, most notably “real or personal” rights (Carmichael, 1724/2002: 78).
Real rights, Carmichael states, involve possession and use of things (i.e., prop-
erty) to which corresponds the obligation of others not to disturb them in
their use of things. Personal rights are about those things and services con-
ditionally owed to us (Carmichael, 1724/2002: 78) as a result of agreements
mediated through devices like contracts. Neither real nor personal rights in
Carmichael’s schema are “absolute” insofar as they may be created, exchanged,
transferred, or abolished. But Carmichael stresses that any such creation,
exchange, or abolition should normally occur through voluntary consent.
Only in emergency situations may the state abrogate such rights.
Hutcheson’s line of reasoning about property is similar. According
to Hutcheson, human reason contains clear evidence of what God desires
of human beings (Hutcheson, 1747/2007: 104-5). One of these desires, he
maintains, is that “we ought to promote the common good of all, and that of
particular persons” (Hutcheson, 1747/2007: 109). In Hutcheson’s view, it is
through people pursuing their advantages without harming others or violating
the natural law that the common good is advanced: “he who profits one part
without hurting another plainly profits the whole” (Hutcheson, 1747/2007:
110). Hutcheson then argues that there are so many “enjoyments and advan-
tages” that all people desire and can procure for themselves “without hurting
others, and which ’tis plainly the interest of society that each one should be
allowed to procure, without obstruction from others.” It follows, he states, that
“each man has a right to procure and obtain such advantages and enjoyments”
(Hutcheson, 1747/2007: 110).
In delineating different property rights, Hutcheson adopted
Carmichael’s categories of real and personal rights (Hutcheson, 1747/2007:
145). He initially focused upon what are the human and just conditions that
allow us to say that one person owns certain goods to the exclusion of others
(Hutcheson, 1747/2007: 137-8). But Hutcheson went on to add that the natural
fruits of a person’s labour are the foundation of merit that provides one person
with a basic title to particular property (Hutcheson, 1747/2007: 139-140).

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48  d  The Essential Natural Law

In part, Hutcheson may be forging an argument against the position


of his contemporary David Hume (1711–1776) who believed that property
emerges as a result of the usefulness of a convention that emerges over time
and eventually receives endorsement and codification in law. While not dis-
missive of these factors, Hutcheson clearly believes that private property is
more than a convention. It is also a requirement of natural reason and justice
and “requisite also to the maintenance of amicable society”: that is, the com-
mon good requires property arrangements that allow people to own things
and use them to the exclusion of others (Hutcheson, 1747/2007: 137-138).
In other words, it is through private property that material goods serve the
well-being of all.

Scholastics and markets


One way in which private property helps realize the principle of common
use is that it identifies who owns what, and who therefore has the specific
power to invest or exchange which elements of property. These are essential
preconditions for the workings of a market.
The development of key ideas underpinning free markets is normally
associated with Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations. But as Odd Langholm points
out, “historians of economic doctrine now recognize that modern theory is
the product of continuous growth over a much longer period of time than
was previously assumed” (Langholm, 1998: vii).
In his 1954 History of Economic Analysis, the economist and historian
of economic thought Joseph Schumpeter drew attention to the work of Jesuit
and Dominican scholastics who made vital contributions to clarifying key
economic concepts. His conclusion was that “the economics of the doctors
absorbed all the phenomena of nascent capitalism and... served... as a basis for
the analytic work of their successors, not excluding A. Smith” (Schumpeter,
1954: 94).
The global expansion of commerce and trade which began in the
Middle Ages and accelerated from the late fifteenth century onwards raised
many moral questions for merchants in Christian Europe. What, for instance,
constituted a just price? Were money markets permissible? Was it legitimate
for the state to give one merchant or a business a monopoly on a given product
or type of industry? Many commercial traders, anxious about their salvation,
turned to their confessors for guidance.

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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).

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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

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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).

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In determining what drove “common estimation,” Luis de Molina


focused on the question of utility. He maintained that “it should be observed
that a price is considered just or unjust not because of the nature of things in
themselves... but due to their ability to serve human utility. Because this is the
way in which they are appreciated by men, they therefore command a price in
the market and in exchanges” (Molina 1593/1597; 1759: 167-168). Molina then
specifies that he understand utility as subjective utility: “the nature and the
need of the use given to them determined the quantity of price... it depends on
the relative appreciation which each man has for the use of the good” (Molina
1593/1597; 1759: 168).

An optimistic view of commerce


Some scholastic thinkers regarded commercial activity as morally indiffer-
ent. Others, however, ascribed positive moral characteristics to trade and
commerce. The economic historian Henry Robertson records that Jesuits
like Suárez and Molina were unashamed promoters of the social benefits
of enterprise, financial speculation, and the expansion of trade (Robertson,
1973). De Soto even portrayed commercial activity as evidence of civilizational
development:

Mankind progresses from imperfection to perfection. For this rea-


son, in the beginning barter was sufficient as man was rude and
ignorant and had few necessities. But afterward, with the devel-
opment of a more educated, civilized and distinguished life, the
need to create new forms of trade arose. Among them the most
respectable is commerce, despite the fact that human avarice can
pervert anything (de Soto, 1553-1554/1968: VI, q.II, a.2).

Aquinas had prefigured this favourable view of commerce, including its


non-economic benefits. Aquinas rejected Aristotle’s view that those involved
in commerce would become obsessed with their own riches and unconcerned
with the common good (Finnis, 1998: 200-210). Instead, Aquinas held that
it was possible for people to engage in commerce with correct intentions
ranging from the desire to help the needy to the duty to take care of one’s
family (ST II–II, q.77, a.4c). Though warning against the folly and sin of greed,

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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.

Commerce across borders


This positive evaluation of commerce on the part of medieval and early mod-
ern natural law thinkers represented a break with the classical world’s view,
which was generally indifferent or even hostile. But it was an evaluation that
became even more significant as European world trade expanded across the
continents from the sixteenth century onwards.

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Chapter 5

The Law of Nations


and International Trade

It is difficult to underestimate the shock of the European encounter with


the Americas at the end of the fifteenth century. The confusion, violence,
and changing circumstances immediately raised questions among scholastic
thinkers about how Europeans should treat the peoples of the Americas. It
also resulted in an exploration of two related questions.
The first was how nations should interact with each other, and on what
basis such relations should be based. The second concerned the issue of the
freedom of people to trade: not simply within with sovereign states but also
across state boundaries. What restrictions, if any, could the authorities place
on those members of their political community who wanted to engage in
commerce with those who belonged to other political communities?
Some of the most important contributions to this topic in the period
were made by natural law thinkers. Moreover, they did so at a time during
which the European world was moving in precisely the opposite direction to
that of free trade.
Prior to the eighteenth century, the dominant economic framework of
post-medieval Western Europe was essentially mercantilism. This was a way of
economic thinking and acting which held that nations became rich by encour-
aging exports and restricting imports (LaHaye, 2021). Governments acted to
protect merchants from foreign competition by imposing tariffs and quotas
on imports, as well as granting monopolies on the production of particular
goods or trade routes to particular merchants. Trade by sea was especially
restricted under mercantile arrangements. While it was rare for states to ban
outright the importation of goods and services from abroad, governments
introduced a number of restrictions that served to minimize competition.

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56  d  The Essential Natural Law

In 1650 and 1651, for example, England introduced the Navigation


Laws (LaHaye, 2021), which sought to prevent foreign-owned ships from
engaging in coastal trade within the English realm. The same laws required
any trade between English colonies and the mother country to be conveyed on
colonial or English ships. Those seeking to break into these protected markets
often found that their only recourse was to engage in smuggling.
Established merchants who benefited from these arrangements typi-
cally returned the government’s favours. They acquiesced in the raising of
taxes and the paying of customs dues that provided funding for, among other
things, wars undertaken by European states to make territorial acquisitions
around the globe, establish colonies, and expand and defend them.
These measures had implications for how sovereign states treated each
other and for merchants who wanted to trade with each other across state
boundaries. Here what was called “the law of nations” became important, not
least because it became a primary reference point for scholastic thinkers who
believed that there were limits on what the state could do to regulate trade
between sovereign states.

The ius gentium


The origins of the idea of the law of nations—the ius gentium—are to be
found in Greek and Roman philosophers and lawyers. In the Institutes of the
Roman jurist Gaius (130–180), the ius gentium is closely associated with the
natural law:

Every people that is governed by statutes and customs observes


partly its own peculiar law and partly the law common to all man-
kind. That law which a people establishes for itself is peculiar to it,
and is called ius civile as being the special law of that state, while
the law that natural reason establishes among all mankind is fol-
lowed by all peoples alike, and is called ius gentium as being the
law observed by all mankind. Thus the Roman people observes
partly its own peculiar law and partly the common law of all man-
kind. (Poste, 1904: 1)

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.

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Roman law, however, also articulated a second sense of ius gentium


(Nichols, 1962: 57-58) that seems closer to the idea of a universal positive law
rather than natural law. In the ancient world, many of the laws applicable to
a person were associated with the state to which he owed allegiance rather
than where he lived. An Athenian citizen living in Corinth, for instance, might
be subject to many Athenian laws and could often legitimately request to be
judged in Athens for a crime committed in Corinth. Not surprisingly, this
created complications for the legal authorities in Corinth and Athens, but
also resentments between them.
This situation was further complicated by the fact that more and more
people were subject to the jurisdiction of not only particular states, but were
also citizens of Rome. It was on this basis that Saint Paul, for instance, was able
to escape from the jurisdiction of both the Jewish religious authorities in first
century Judea as well as that of King Herod Agrippa II (Rome’s client ruler of
several territories in modern-day Israel) by appealing his case to the Roman
Emperor on the grounds that Paul possessed Roman citizenship.
To address potential conflicts between different jurisdictions, a Roman
body of law had emerged by the first century B.C. that was applicable to every-
one across the Empire, regardless of whether they held citizenship of one or
more states or were living in a different jurisdiction to that from where they
derived their particular citizenship. This Roman law embraced all the tribes,
city-states, or peoples (gentibus) within the Empire and was considered as
distinct from and more authoritative than the ius civile (the law specific to a
particular state).
Following Rome’s fall, the bishop and scholar Isidore of Seville (560–
636) played a major role in preserving, codifying, and clarifying the two senses
of the ius gentium. He listed a number of institutions (such as peace treaties
and the treatment of prisoners in wartime) that he regarded as belonging to
the law of nations (Isidore, 1472/1911: 5.6). He added that this law was so called
because it was in force among almost all peoples (Isidore, 1472/1911: 5.9).
The medieval treatment of ius gentium differed slightly from that of
the Roman jurists. While Aquinas agreed with Gaius’s distinction between ius
civile and ius gentium (ST I-II, q.95, a.2, 4), his references to the ius gentium
specified that it was that aspect of positive law that was immediately derived
by deduction from the natural law and which was universally applicable across
jurisdictional boundaries (ST I-II, q.95, a.2, 4).

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58  d  The Essential Natural Law

For Aquinas, an example of this is contracts. Contracts had been


introduced into society because they were proven to serve the well-being
of individuals and communities (ST II-II, q.77 a.1c). To that extent, contract
law was a matter of positive law rather than natural law. Yet contract law was
also unquestionably based on the principle known as pacta sunt servanda
(agreements are to be performed). This principle was so essential for justice
and order in any human community that, Aquinas argued, it (like property)
should be understood by all peoples as immediately deducible from principles
of natural law (ST I-II, q.95 a.4c and ad.1; and II-II, q.57, a.3c and ad.1). It thus
belongs to the ius gentium rather than the ius civile.
Like Aquinas, Suárez maintained that the ius gentium was somewhere
between natural and positive law. It was, he said, “a mean between natural
and human law, and very much closer to the former” (Suárez, c.1612/2012b:
II, 17, 1). He divided, however, the contents of ius gentium into two groups.
The first group was those laws that were part of the domestic law of
most states, such as laws governing property and domestic commerce (Suárez,
c.1612/2012: II, 20, 7). The second group was those laws that were common in
the way they coordinated relationships between peoples (laws inter nationes).
Examples included the laws governing war and international commerce
(Suárez, c.1612/2012b: II, 19, 8). These, Suárez held, were most worthy of the
title of ius gentium (Suárez, c.1612/2012b: II, 19, 8). Vitoria had made a similar
point when he shifted the emphasis of ius gentium from inter omnes homines
[between all men] to inter omnes gentes [between all peoples] (Vitoria,
1557/1917: rel. I, sect III).
It was the almost completely universal character of the ius gentium,
Suárez held, that invested it with a moral status more authoritative than other
laws and an authority very close to that of natural law. According to Suárez, the
ius gentium emerged through “practice itself and by tradition” and “without
any special meeting or consent of all peoples at a particular time.” Its universal
usage, however, was derived from the fact that the ius gentium “is so close
to nature and so suited to all nations and the fellowship between them that
it would have been almost naturally propagated along with the human race
itself, and thus it was not written, because it was laid down by no lawgiver,
but prevailed by usage” (Suárez, c.1612/2012b: II, 20, 1).
Clearly Suárez regarded the ius gentium as an instance of customary
law and tradition rather than formal prescription (Suárez, c.1612/2012b: III,

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The Essential Natural Law  d 59 

2, 6). Nevertheless, in light of people’s propensity to disagree about so many


things, agreement about something across the divisions of nations and peoples
was, in Suárez’s view, significant proof of the innate reasonability of a law
(Suárez, c.1612/2012b: II, 19, 50).
Suárez also made the crucial point that the ius gentium bound people
together over and above sovereign states. The ius gentium’s provisions thus
extended to everyone—“even foreigners and members of any nation whatso-
ever” (Suárez, c.1612/2012b: II, 10, 9). This did not mean that humanity in its
entirety had at some time consented to the content of the ius gentium. Rather,
all peoples were expected to have independently recognized its content by
virtue of their possession of reason. Widespread failure within a given politi-
cal community to know the ius gentium thus was considered proof of that
society’s corruption or barbarism.
These arguments underwent further modification following the rise
of the modern state with its particular claim to sovereignty and the increas-
ing instances of war between such states after the Reformation. The effect
was to generate an appropriation and rethinking of the principles of the ius
gentium as part of the public international law designed to govern relations
between sovereign states after the 1648 Treaty of Westphalia. This Treaty,
which brought an end to the Thirty Years War that had devastated Europe,
formally established the principles crucial to modern international relations,
especially the principle of non-interference in the domestic affairs of sovereign
states and the inviolability of the borders of those sovereign states.
Hugo Grotius played a major role in this rethinking by seeking to
codify “a body of law that is maintained between states” that was conceptually
distinct from the civil law of states and also grounded in “the law of nature
and nations” (Grotius, 1625/2005: I, Prolegomena, 17-18, 39-41). Pufendorf
likewise insisted that the ius gentium was more than just convention. He
accepted Grotius’ argument that the law of nations was, strictly speaking,
the law between states as opposed to the natural law shared by all humanity
(Pufendorf, 1672/1998: bk.II, ch.III, 23), but also stressed that it was very
close to the latter.
In his highly influential The Law of Nations (1758), Emer de Vattel
added the further qualification that nations and individuals were distinct
entities. This subsequently results, Vattel wrote, in each having “very differ-
ent obligations and rights” (Vattel, 1758/2008: Preliminaries, 6). Discerning

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60  d  The Essential Natural Law

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.

Trade between nations


The urgency with which natural law scholars invested their discussions of
the nature and scope of the law of nations owed much to the expansion of
international commerce. Writing in the late sixteenth century, the jurist and
historian Bartolomé de Albornóz described commercial activity as

the nerve of human life that sustains the universe. By means of


buying and selling the world is united, joining distant lands and
nations, people of different language, laws and ways of life. If it
were not for these contracts, some would lack the goods that oth-
ers have in abundance and they would not be able to share the
goods that they have in excess with those countries where they
are scarce. (Albornóz, 1573: VII, 29)

Looking at the commercial life of Seville, Spain, Mercado saw a society


in which a “banker traffics with a whole world and embraces more than the
Atlantic, though sometimes he loses his grip and it all comes tumbling down”
(Mercado, 1571/1975: bk.2, ch.2, fol.15).
Reflecting on these circumstances, many scholastic thinkers started to
ask how natural law and the law of nations might apply to questions arising
out of the fact of this spread of trade across the globe. When Vitoria studied
interactions between Spain and its newly acquired colonies, he argued that
“Spaniards have a right to travel into the lands” of the Indians, though they
were not permitted to harm the Indians. Such a right, he argued, was “derived
from the law of nations, which is either natural law or derived from natural
law.” Vitoria went on to state that the same ius gentium held that foreigners
“may carry on trade, provided they do not harm to citizens.” He also insisted
that the rulers of the Indians could not “hinder their subjects from carrying
on trade with the Spanish; nor... may the princes of Spain prevent commerce
with the natives” (Vitoria, 1557/1917: 151-153).

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The Essential Natural Law  d 61 

Suárez embraced Vitoria’s principle of freedom to trade and promoted


it as a right arising from the law of nations. “A state,” Suárez wrote, “might
conceivably exist in isolation and refuse to enter into commercial relations
with another state… but,” he added, “it has been established by the ius gentium
that commercial intercourse shall be free, and it would be a violation of that
system of law if such intercourse were prohibited without reasonable cause”
(Suárez, c.1612/2012: II, 347).
The natural law thinker who was most focused on trade and argued
strongly in favour of free trade was Grotius, most particularly in his 1609 book
Mare Librum [The Free Sea]. He criticized Portuguese efforts to establish a
monopoly on trade with the East Indies and maintained that no-one had a
right to exclude others from the open seas. “Under the law of nations,” Grotius
wrote, “all men should be privileged to trade freely with one another.” It was
subsequently impermissible for any state, he insisted, to inhibit another state’s
subjects from trading with its subjects, precisely because the “right to engage
in commerce pertains equally to all peoples” (Grotius, 1609/2004: I, 218).
Grotius’s most important book, On the Rights of War and Peace, repeats
these key arguments: “No one, in fact, has the right to hinder any nation from
carrying on commerce with another nation at a distance” (Grotius, 1625/2005:
II, 199). While he did not exclude requiring merchants to pay taxes to help
cover the costs of various public expenses associated with trade, Grotius
opposed the imposition of any tax that has nothing to do with paying for the
costs of trading the good. Justice, he argued, “does not permit the imposition
of any burdens that have no relation to the merchandise actually in transit”
(Grotius, 1625/2005: II, 199). This meant that the government could not, for
example, impose a tariff on trade with the objective of trying to make imports
more expensive. It could, however, impose a tariff if the objective was to pay
for the maintenance of roads and harbours that facilitated trade.
In both Pufendorf and Vattel, we see some modifications to the posi-
tions advanced by Vitoria, Suárez, and Grotius. Pufendorf affirmed the right to
trade along the lines established by Grotius: “it is highly inhuman,” he stated,
“to deny a native of our world the use of those good things which the com-
mon Father of all men has poured forth.” These words reflect the principle of
common use. Nonetheless, he also argued that the state may regulate trade.
Pufendorf, for example, details several exceptions, most of which gravitate
around possible harms that might befall a country (Pufendorf, 1660/2009:

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62  d  The Essential Natural Law

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:

It is seldom that nature is seen in one place to produce every-


thing necessary for the use of man: one country abounds in corn,
another in pastures and cattle, a third in timber and metals, &c.
If all those countries trade together, as is agreeable to human
nature, no one of them will be without such things as are useful
and necessary; and the views of nature, our common mother, will
be fulfilled. (Vattel, 1758/2008: bk.2, ch.2, s.21)

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:

Freedom... is implied in the duties of nations, that they should


support it as far as possible, instead of cramping it by unnecessary

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The Essential Natural Law  d 63 

burdens or restrictions. Wherefore those private privileges and


tolls, which obtain in many places, and press so heavily on com-
merce, are deservedly to be reprobated, unless founded on very
important reasons arising from the public good.... Every nation, in
virtue of her natural liberty, has a right to trade with those who are
willing to correspond with such intentions; and to molest her in
the exercise of her right is doing her an injury. (Vattel, 1758/2008:
bk.2, ch.2, s.23)

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

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64  d  The Essential Natural Law

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.

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Chapter 6

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

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66  d  The Essential Natural Law

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

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The Essential Natural Law  d 67 

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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68  d  The Essential Natural Law

possibility that rights may be reduced to whatever mobs, powerful individu-


als, well-connected lobbies, the government, or some combination of all these
forces want them to be.
In such circumstances, what the United States Declaration of
Independence called “unalienable rights” would no longer be so unalienable.
Any state that comes to be seen as the ultimate source of rights is also a state
that can take away those same rights—in which case rights would no longer
be about justice; instead they would function simply as political and legal
masks for raw assertions of power.
Therein lies one of natural law’s major contributions to politics, law,
and social life in a free society. It provides principles grounded upon reason
that are independent of the perpetual rising and falling of what is fashionable
or the influence of interest groups.
Without some type of conviction, however latent it might be, that
there are universal moral and philosophical truths which the human mind
can comprehend, it is harder for free societies to resist whoever happens to
be the stronger, or more ruthless, let alone create space for people to make the
type of free choices that allow us to participate in goods that are self-evidently
beneficial for humans. In this sense, understanding natural law and the prin-
ciples that it embodies surely has enormous potential to serve as a powerful
ballast for the free society and to remind us of why liberty is important and
why the protection of freedom merits eternal vigilance.

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Mercado, Tomas de (1571/1975). Summa de Tractos y Contractos. IEP.

Molina, Luis (1593/1597/1759). De Iustitia et Iure. Vol. 2: Coloniae


Allobrogum. Cuenca.

Nichols, Barry (1962). An Introduction to Roman Law. Oxford University


Press.

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Poste, Edward (1904). Gai Institutiones or Institutes of Roman Law by


Gaius. E.A. Whittuck, ed. Clarendon Press.

Pius XI (1937). Divini Redemptoris Encyclical of Pope Pius XI on Atheistic


Communism to the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, and Other
Ordinaries in Peace and Communion with the Apostolic See. <https://
www.vatican.va/content/pius-xi/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xi_
enc_19370319_divini-redemptoris.html >, as of August 10, 2021.

Pufendorf, Samuel von (1660/2009). Two Books of the Elements of Universal


Jurisprudence. Thomas Behme, ed. Liberty Fund.

Pufendorf, Samuel von (1672/1998). De Jure Naturae et Gentium Libri Octo.


Frank Böhling, ed. Akademie Verlag.

Robertson, Henry (1973). Aspects of the Rise of Economic Individualism:


A Criticism of Max Weber and His School. A.M. Kelly.

Rorty, Richard (1988). Taking Philosophy Seriously. New Republic (April 11):
33.

Rorty, Richard (1991). The Seer of Prague. New Republic (July 1): 31.

Thils, Germain (1981). Droits de l’homme et perspectives chrétiennes. Fayard.

Schumpeter, Joseph A. (1954). History of Economic Analysis. Oxford


University Press.

Soto, Domingo de (1553-1554/1968). De Iustitia et Iure. IEP.

Suárez, Francisco (c.1612/2012a). Tractatus De Legibus Ac Deo Legislatore.


Ulan Press.

Suárez, Francisco (c.1612/2012b). De opere sex dierum. Nabu Press.

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Vattel, Emer de (1758/2008). The Law of Nations. Béla Kapossy and Richard
Whatmore, ed. Liberty Fund.

Vitoria, Francisco de (1557/1917). De indis et iure belli relectiones. Ernest


Nys, ed. The Carnegie Institution of Washington.

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Suggested Further Reading

The literature on natural law is vast and is found in disciplines like philosophy,
law, theology, political science, metaphysics, and history.

Websites focused on natural law


In addition to the works cited in this book, an excellent resource for those
interested in natural law is located at The Witherspoon Institute’s online cen-
ter for Natural Law, Natural Rights, and American Constitutionalism. This
resource is conceived as an archive for and a commentary on the seminal
documents of the natural law tradition, beginning with Plato and continuing
all the way through history to late-twentieth century new natural law theory.
It also contains a special section on natural law, natural rights, and American
constitutionalism and political thought, as well as a section on critics of natu-
ral law theory. It can be found at: <http://www.nlnrac.org/>
For those interested in natural law texts written in the early modern and
Enlightenment periods, The Natural Law and Enlightenment Classics Series
published by Liberty Fund presents not only some of the most significant natu-
ral law writers from this period but also the lesser-known theorists who con-
tributed to the development of natural law ideas. It can be found at <https://
www.libertyfund.org/collections/natural-law-and-enlightenment-classics/>

Further learning about natural law


Many of the works cited in this book are also a good place to begin reading
more widely about natural law. Other such works include:

Budziszewski, J. (1997). Written on the Heart: The Case for Natural Law.
IVP Academic.

Copleston, F.C. (1955). Aquinas. Penguin Books.

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76  d  The Essential Natural Law

D’Entrèves, Alexander P. (1951). Natural Law: An Introduction to Legal


Philosophy. Hutchison University Library.

Gregg, Samuel (2003). On Ordered Liberty. Lexington Books.

Grisez, Germain, and Russell Shaw (1988). Beyond the New Morality: The
Responsibilities of Freedom. University of Notre Dame Press.

Murphy, Mark C. (2019). The Natural Law Tradition in Ethics, Stanford


Encyclopedia of Philosophy. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/natural-law
-ethics/#NatLawPraRat

More advanced books include

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.

Foot, Philippa (2001). Natural Goodness. Oxford University Press.

Gomez-Lobo, Alfonso (2002). Morality and the Human Goods: An


Introduction to Natural Law Ethics. Georgetown University Press.

Haakonssen, Knud (1996). Natural Law and Moral Philosophy: From


Grotius to the Scottish Enlightenment. Cambridge University 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.

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The Essential Natural Law  d 77 

John Paul II (1993). Veritatis Splendor. Encyclical. <http://www.vatican.va/


content/john-paul-ii/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_jp-ii_enc_06081993_
veritatis-splendor.html>, as of July 12, 2021.

Midgley, E.B.F. (1975). The Natural Law Tradition and the Theory of
International Relations. Paul Elek.

Novak, David (1998). Natural Law in Judaism. Cambridge University Press.

Rasmussen, Douglas B., and Douglas J. Den Uyl (2005). Norms of Liberty:
A Perfectionist Basis for Non-Perfectionist Politics. Pennsylvania State
University Press.

Rhonheimer, Martin (2000). Natural Law and Practical Reason: A Thomist


View of Moral Autonomy. Fordham 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.

Weinreb, Lloyd L. (1987). Natural Law and Justice. Harvard University


Press.

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.

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78  d  The Essential Natural Law

Gregg, Samuel, and Harold James, eds. (2012). Natural Law, Economics and
the Common Good. Imprint Academic.

The American Journal of Jurisprudence. <https://academic.oup.com/ajj>

The Thomist. <https://www.cuapress.org/journals/the-thomist/>

Some works critical of natural law include:

Austin, John (1832/1998). The Province of Jurisprudence Determined.


Ashgate Publishing Limited.

Goodnow, Frank Johnson (1916). The American Conception of Liberty and


Government. Brown University.

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.

Kramer, Matthew (1999). In Defense of Legal Positivism: Law Without


Trimmings. Clarendon Press.

Murphy, James Bernard (2005). The Philosophy of Positive Law. Yale


University Press.

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The Essential Natural Law  d 79

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80  d  The Essential Natural Law

About the author


Samuel Gregg is Research Director at the Acton Institute in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
He is also a Visiting Scholar at the Feulner Institute at the Heritage Foundation in
Washington DC, a Fellow at the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory
University in Atlanta, Georgia, and a Contributing Editor at Law and Liberty, part of
the Liberty Fund Network in Indianapolis, Indiana. The author of 16 books—including
the prize-winning The Commercial Society (2007), Wilhelm Röpke’s Political Economy
(2010), Becoming Europe (2013), the prize-winning Reason, Faith, and the Struggle for
Western Civilization (2019), and over 400 articles and opinion pieces—he writes regu-
larly on political economy, finance, American conservatism, Western civilization, and
natural law theory. He served as President of the Philadelphia Society from 2019-2021.
He is the General Editor of Lexington Books’ Studies in Ethics and Economics Series.
He also sits on the Academic Advisory Boards of Campion College in Sydney, Australia;
the Fundación Burke in Madrid, Spain; the Instituto Fe y Libertad in Guatemala City,
Guatemala; the Institute of Economic Affairs in London, United Kingdom; the Argaman
Institute in Jerusalem, Israel; as well as the editorial boards of the Journal of Markets
and Morality and Revista Valores en la sociedad industrial. In 2001, he was elected a
Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, a Member of the Mont Pèlerin Society in 2004,
and a member of the Royal Economic Society in 2008.

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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The Essential Natural Law  d 81

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Editorial Advisory Board


Members
Prof. Terry L. Anderson Prof. Herbert G. Grubel

Prof. Robert Barro Prof. James Gwartney

Prof. Jean-Pierre Centi Prof. Ronald W. Jones

Prof. John Chant Dr. Jerry Jordan

Prof. Bev Dahlby Prof. Ross McKitrick

Prof. Erwin Diewert Prof. Michael Parkin

Prof. Stephen Easton Prof. Friedrich Schneider

Prof. J.C. Herbert Emery Prof. Lawrence B. Smith

Prof. Jack L. Granatstein Dr. Vito Tanzi

Past members
Prof. Armen Alchian* Prof. F.G. Pennance*

Prof. Michael Bliss Prof. George Stigler* †

Prof. James M. Buchanan* † Sir Alan Walters*

Prof. Friedrich A. Hayek* † Prof. Edwin G. West*

Prof. H.G. Johnson*

* deceased; † Nobel Laureate

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