Elucidación de las Normas Cristianas

Saint Augustine and Saint Th omas Aquinas iusnaturalist continue the tradition of Aristotle and Cicero and many other philosophers. Depart from the ontological aspect of natural law as requirements of rational human nature, and of a gnoseological aspect as knowledge of these demands and imperatives...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Juan Castillo Vegas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centro Universitário de Valença 2015-07-01
Series:Revista Interdisciplinar de Direito
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.faa.edu.br/index.php/FDV/article/view/121/97
Description
Summary:Saint Augustine and Saint Th omas Aquinas iusnaturalist continue the tradition of Aristotle and Cicero and many other philosophers. Depart from the ontological aspect of natural law as requirements of rational human nature, and of a gnoseological aspect as knowledge of these demands and imperatives for the reason. Without this natural moral law is not doing anything as it is, because they are the fi rst duties of the human being. Without this natural moral law, natural law is a part, there would be no human reason since they do not know nor the fi rst principles of practical reason in regard to good and evil, the just and the unjust. Nor would there be freedom, since being a quality of the will as rational appetite, it could not exist without a rational knowledge. Without this natural moral law the man would be the only being in the universe without a law in its own nature in the tilt to its own perfection and development.
ISSN:2447-4290
1518-8167