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  1. Feb 5, 2007 · Natural law theories all understand law as a remedy against the great evils of, on the one side anarchy (lawlessness), and on the other side tyranny. And one of tyranny’s characteristic forms is the co-optation of law to deploy it as a mask for fundamentally lawless decisions cloaked in the forms of law and legality.

  2. 3 days ago · Natural law is a system of right or justice derived from nature rather than from positive law. Learn about the origins, theories, and applications of natural law in philosophy, theology, and politics.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Natural law is a type of moral and legal theory that connects law and morality in some way. Learn about the different kinds of natural law theories, their core claims, and their critics.

  4. May 27, 2001 · This general question about the nature of law presupposes that law is a unique social-political phenomenon, with more or less universal characteristics that can be discerned through philosophical analysis. General jurisprudence, as this philosophical inquiry about the nature of law is called, is meant to be universal.

    • Andrei Marmor, Alexander Sarch
    • 2001
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  6. Mar 10, 2021 · Aquinas’s Natural Law Theory contains four different types of law: Eternal Law, Natural Law, Human Law and Divine Law. The way to understand these four laws and how they relate to one another is via the Eternal Law, so we’d better start there…. By “Eternal Law’” Aquinas means God’s rational purpose and plan for all things.

  7. Sep 23, 2002 · The Natural Law Tradition in Ethics. ‘Natural law theory’ is a label that has been applied to theories of ethics, theories of politics, theories of civil law, and theories of religious morality. We will be concerned only with natural law theories of ethics: while such views arguably have some interesting implications for law, politics, and ...

  8. of human law is an expression of or an application of the moral law. (natural law). A human law is just only insofar as (a) it is reason ably related to the achievement of the common good, (b) the law has been enacted by a competent legislator and (c) the burdens it imposes are not unreasonably distributed.

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