Natural right constitutionalism : a theory of political liberalism expounded from contemporary Thomistic resources

This thesis outlines a species of political liberalism and an understanding of human rights developed from contemporary interpretations of Thomas Aquinas’s moral, legal and political theory. Working from a reading of Aquinas’s ethics that stresses both its eudaimonism and the capacity of practical r...

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Main Author: Walker, Gregory H.
Published: Cardiff University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.567268
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5672682015-03-20T03:22:56ZNatural right constitutionalism : a theory of political liberalism expounded from contemporary Thomistic resourcesWalker, Gregory H.2012This thesis outlines a species of political liberalism and an understanding of human rights developed from contemporary interpretations of Thomas Aquinas’s moral, legal and political theory. Working from a reading of Aquinas’s ethics that stresses both its eudaimonism and the capacity of practical reason to immediately apprehend certain human goods, the work builds on this ethical understanding by propounding a substantive approach to justice and natural right in the legal-political domain. It is argued that a Thomistic conception of justice and natural right is consistent with the notion of subjective human rights, including both fundamental human rights and certain ‘liberty’ or ‘choice’ rights. The thesis demonstrates that Aquinas’s innovative approach to justice and the political common good is useful in addressing key points in debates in political theory on human rights practice, ideal theory and forms of social criticism. Such an approach to natural right is developed into a particular species of political liberalism, based on the genus type put forward by John Rawls and Jacques Maritain before him. The work justifies a form of political liberalism in which public reason is focused on building an overlapping consensus on the political common good between citizens through practical reasoning, but one in which there is a permissive approach to the use of metaphysical or religious arguments in the public domain. The work concludes by offering a defence of a form of political rather than legal constitutionalism; one that takes normative orientations on the nature of political freedom and the consequent role of government from neo republican theorists, whose positions are held in some respects to be complementary with those of political liberals.320.01JC Political theoryCardiff Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.567268http://orca.cf.ac.uk/23661/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 320.01
JC Political theory
spellingShingle 320.01
JC Political theory
Walker, Gregory H.
Natural right constitutionalism : a theory of political liberalism expounded from contemporary Thomistic resources
description This thesis outlines a species of political liberalism and an understanding of human rights developed from contemporary interpretations of Thomas Aquinas’s moral, legal and political theory. Working from a reading of Aquinas’s ethics that stresses both its eudaimonism and the capacity of practical reason to immediately apprehend certain human goods, the work builds on this ethical understanding by propounding a substantive approach to justice and natural right in the legal-political domain. It is argued that a Thomistic conception of justice and natural right is consistent with the notion of subjective human rights, including both fundamental human rights and certain ‘liberty’ or ‘choice’ rights. The thesis demonstrates that Aquinas’s innovative approach to justice and the political common good is useful in addressing key points in debates in political theory on human rights practice, ideal theory and forms of social criticism. Such an approach to natural right is developed into a particular species of political liberalism, based on the genus type put forward by John Rawls and Jacques Maritain before him. The work justifies a form of political liberalism in which public reason is focused on building an overlapping consensus on the political common good between citizens through practical reasoning, but one in which there is a permissive approach to the use of metaphysical or religious arguments in the public domain. The work concludes by offering a defence of a form of political rather than legal constitutionalism; one that takes normative orientations on the nature of political freedom and the consequent role of government from neo republican theorists, whose positions are held in some respects to be complementary with those of political liberals.
author Walker, Gregory H.
author_facet Walker, Gregory H.
author_sort Walker, Gregory H.
title Natural right constitutionalism : a theory of political liberalism expounded from contemporary Thomistic resources
title_short Natural right constitutionalism : a theory of political liberalism expounded from contemporary Thomistic resources
title_full Natural right constitutionalism : a theory of political liberalism expounded from contemporary Thomistic resources
title_fullStr Natural right constitutionalism : a theory of political liberalism expounded from contemporary Thomistic resources
title_full_unstemmed Natural right constitutionalism : a theory of political liberalism expounded from contemporary Thomistic resources
title_sort natural right constitutionalism : a theory of political liberalism expounded from contemporary thomistic resources
publisher Cardiff University
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.567268
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