Buch, Englisch, 504 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 233 mm, Gewicht: 806 g
Reihe: Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law
Buch, Englisch, 504 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 233 mm, Gewicht: 806 g
Reihe: Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law
ISBN: 978-1-009-33216-3
Verlag: Cambridge University Press
To understand our current world crises, it is essential to study the origins of the systems and institutions we now take for granted. This book takes a novel approach to charting intellectual, scientific and philosophical histories alongside the development of the international legal order by studying the philosophy and theology of the Scientific Revolution and its impact on European natural law, political liberalism and political economy. Starting from analysis of the work of Thomas Hobbes, Robert Boyle and John Locke on natural law, the author incorporates a holistic approach that encompasses global legal matters beyond the foundational matters of treaties and diplomacy. The monograph promotes a sustainable transformation of international law in the context of related philosophy, history and theology. Tackling issues such as nature, money, necessities, human nature, secularism and epistemology, which underlie natural lawyers' thinking, Associate Professor García-Salmones explains their enduring relevance for international legal studies today.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface; Introduction; 1. A Christian Science: Searching for the Common Good and the Public Good; 1.1 Deism, Neoplatonism and the Light of Reason; 1.2 Scepticism and Moral Righteousness; 1.3 Hobbes and Locke versus Filmer on Political Economy; 1.4 The New Oeconomies: Household – State -Nature; 2. Hobbes's Doctrine of Necessity; 2.1 Hobbes's Doctrine of Necessity and Existence; 2.1.1 A Yearning for Necessity; 2.1.2 Neoplatonist Necessary Existence of Avicenna; 2.2 Necessitarian Metaphysics and (Human) Body in Avicenna and Hobbes; 2.2.1 Hobbes's Early Necessitarianism; 2.2.2 Hobbes's Metaphysics of Bodies and its Implication to Morality; 3. Necessities, Natural Rights and Sovereignty in Leviathan; 3.1 Hobbes's Necessity, Theology and Natural Laws; 3.1.1 Within the Tradition of Power; 3.1.2 The Tradition of Natural Laws Updated; 3.2 The Doctrine of Necessity in Leviathan; 3.2.1 Natural Rights and Necessity; 3.2.2 The Needs of Others; 3.2.3 Naturalism; 3.2.4 The Needs of the Sovereign; 3.2.5 The Necessary Freedom; 3.2.6 Faith and Necessity; 4. Reformers on the Necessary Knowledge; 4.1 Useful Knowledge as the Only Necessary Knowledge: Benjamin Worsley in Context; 4.1.1 Jan Comenius and Sir Cheney Culpeper on Nature; 4.1.2 A 'Professor of Necessities'; 4.1.3 Robert Boyle: between Nature and Utilitarian Science; 4.2 All-Encompassing Human Necessities; 4.2.1 Hartlib's 'Office of Publick Address'; 4.2.2 'A Well Regulated Plantation'; 4.2.3 The Knowledge of Trade; 5. Necessity, Free Will and Conscience: Robert Sanderson; 5.1 Logician and Theologian:; 5.1.1 An English Casuist; 5.1.2 Predestination, Necessity and Free Will; 5.2 The Mechanical Conscience; 5.2.1 The Age of Conscience; 5.2.2 Albert the Great, Aquinas and Ralph Cudworth on the Agent Intellect; 5.2.3 Necessary Discursive Reasoning; 5.2.4 The Necessity of Obedience; 6. The Grand Business of Nature; 6.1 The Oeconomy of Nature; 6.1.1 The Last Atom; 6.1.2 The Multiplier; 6.1.3 Natural Philosophy Without Moral Natural Law; 6.2 The Fact of Man; 6.2.1 Voluntarist Law; 6.2.2 Aretology: Embracing Human Body; 6.3 The Grand Business of Nature; 6.3.1 Aquinas's Theology of Use; 6.3.2 Knowing the Bountiful Nature; 6.3.3 Technology from the Plantations; 7. Robert Boyle, the Empire over Nature; 7.1 Nothing is Necessary: Benjamin Worsley Revisited; 7.1.1 Mentoring Boyle; 7.1.2 Worsley the Prophet; 7.2 The Transmutator of Nature; 7.2.1 God's Concurrence; 7.2.2 The Uncertain Boundaries of Natures; 7.2.3 God's Arbitrary Will and Humans' Right Reasoning; 7.2.4 The Viewpoint in Boyle's Laws of Nature; 7.2.5 Selden, Milton, Cumberland and Boyle on Weakness of Reason; 7.3 Undoing Nature; 7.3.1 The Unlimited Reason; 7.3.2 The 'Unnecessariness' of Nature; 8 Locke's Early Writings; 8.1 Independent Judgment of Conscience, Public Law and Public Interest; 8.1.1 The Governance of 'Matters Indifferent'; 8.1.2 Locke's Tracts on Government and Judgment about Necessary Things; 8.1.3 Moral Perplexity Erased; 8.2 Undoing Conscience; 8.2.1 No Innate Principles; 8.2.2 Common Necessities and Not Interest; 9. Medicine, Oeconomy and Needs; 9.1 The Oeconomy of Needs; 9.1.1 Resituating Natural Law in a Philosophy of Necessities and Needs; 9.1.2 Studying and Practicing Medicine; 9.1.3 Galenism; 9.2 Physicians and Oeconomia; 9.2.1 Towards a Politics of Household; 9.2.2 Politicisation and Depoliticisation of Needs; 9.2.3 Avicenna's Kitâb Al-siyâsa (Politics), the Metaphysics of 'The Healing' and the Pragmatic Politicisation of Needs; 10. Money and the Doctrine of Necessities; 10.1 Locke's Doctrine of Necessities; 10.1.1 A Changing Perspective: Corpuscularianism; 10.1.2 Necessities; 10.1.3 The (Sometimes Dark) Politics of Necessities; 10.2 Usury, Interest and Science; 10.2.1 Fraternal Love v. Love of Money; 10.2.2 The Acts Against Usury; 10.2.3 The Concerns of Gerard Malynes; 10.2.4 The Scholars' Discussion; 10.2.5