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Natural Law and Virtue
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14173 |
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Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
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| Issue
Date : |
1 / 1988 |
5,735 Words |
| Author
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Ralph McInerny Ralph McInerny, who holds the Michael P. Grace Chair in
Medieval Studies, is professor of philosophy and director of
Jacques Maritain Center at Notre Dame. |
If virtue is making a comeback in contemporary moral philosophy, the same cannot be said for natural law.
I think this is unfortunate. Indeed, it seems to be that out understanding of virtue will suffer fatally it we seek to separate virtue from those objective conditions in human nature that support it.
Much continues to be written on the subject of natural law, some of it excellent, but the very ascendancy of virtue carries with it the suggestion that to speak of human action in terms of law is to adopt an exiguous point of view. More seriously, there may seem to be a conflict between the approaches that natural law and virtue take to moral philosophy.
Iris Murdoch, in The Sovereignty of the Good, was one of the first to draw attention to the fact that actors cast in the role of human persons in the then dominant way of doing moral philosophy had little to do with flesh-and-blood individuals. The moral agent was thought of as someone facing a puzzle and seeking a solution to it, the suggestion being that clarifying the problem and finding the solution to it summed up the ethical task. From this seemingly innocent assumption, odd consequences result.
First, the following disjunction presented itself: Either every waking moment is one in which the agent finds himself puzzled, or the moral life is episodic. Since it is false that humans are forever confronting quandaries, the moral life, according to this division, would be composed of those separate and discrete occasions when one is confronting a moral problem. But how is human life in the
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