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Jurisprudence

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Jurisprudence By Tori, Paola, Brad, and Adam The Philosophy of Law The most common question a lawyer asks themselves is: what is the law on a particular issue? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Jurisprudence


1
Jurisprudence
  • By Tori, Paola, Brad, and Adam

2
The Philosophy of Law
  • The most common question a lawyer asks themselves
    is what is the law on a particular issue? This
    question differs according to a particular
    jurisdiction in which they are asked.
  • In comparison, the philosophy of law deals with
    the more general question of what is law? This
    question about the nature of law predicts that
    the law is a unique social and political
    experience with more or less universal
    characteristics that can be determined through
    philosophical analysis.
  • The philosophical inquiry of the nature of law is
    known as the general jurisprudence. It says that
    the law possesses certain aspects through nature,
    essence, law, and where and when it occurs.

3
The Philosophy of Law
  • There is an intellectual interest in perceiving
    such a complex social experience in the
    philosophy of law. Law can also have normal
    social practices including purposes to guide
    human behaviour, giving reasons of action. These
    two practices of law are strongly linked. Not
    only is law about culture, morality, religion,
    social convention, and etiquette it is also
    about guiding human conduct in relation to law.
  • Therefore, to understand the nature and
    philosophy of law, we must understand how law
    differs from these similar normative domains, how
    it interacts with them, and whether it depends on
    other normative orders.

4
Biography St. Thomas Aquinas
  • St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274)
  • Dominican friar who incorporated Aristotles
    theories into theology a priest and doctor of the
    Church
  • Aquinas said that ethics comes from the end that
    is inscribed in the nature of all creatures at a
    persons core is a desire for the good
  • Aquinas equated God with the highest good the
    fullness a good life is not to be found on earth
    the full good life only comes in the resurrection
    as Gods pure gift
  • People can live the good life by using their
    intelligence and other capabilities such as their
    senses, and by following natural law nothing
    other than the light of understanding placed in
    us by God through it we know what we must do and
    what we must avoid.

5
Biography St. Thomas Aquinas
  • Believed successful people have four virtues,
    also known as the cardinal virtues, the hinges
    that support life (cardo-latin for hinge)1)
    prudence (know how to reason well in moral
    decision making)2) temperance (remain moderate
    in the exercise of emotions)3) fortitude (how to
    be courageous in the face of lifes
    difficulties)4) justice (how to act well in
    relation to others)
  • Gods gift of Jesus and the Holy Spirit changes
    the way we define what is good the theological
    virtues of faith, hope and charity begin as a
    pure gift. I.e. charity it is because God lives
    us that we can love othersOur response this gift
    is to accept it, give praise and thanks, and live
    inaccordance with the gift

6
Summary St Thomas Aquinas
  • Medieval Christian Theologians played a huge
    influence in the nature of law. Medieval thinkers
    believed that unity of the spirit and earthly
    worlds, where science and rationalism were
    consistent with Christian truth. The belief of
    unity supported a theory of law in which
    church-made laws were to rule over civil/human
    made laws. Saint Thomas Aquinas was a Dominican
    monk. He believed that law mirrored a natural
    world order made known to humans by their own
    process of reasoning and by the divine relation
    of Christian philosophers. St. Thomas wrote his
    works Summa Theologica and was greatly
    influenced by Plato and Aristotle.

7
Influence on St. Thomas Aquinas
  • Aristotles Influence
  • Similar to Aristotle, Aquinas believed that
    there is a strong connection between law and
    reason. (Aquinas says that reasoning ultimately
    results to good and avoids the bad)
  • Platos Influences
  • Similar to Plato, Aquinas believed of the
    example of refusing to restore goods held in
    trust to an owner who intended to use them in a
    revolt against the state.

8
Quote Aristotle
  • It is in justice that the ordering of society
    is centered- Aristotle

9
Quote Plato
  • Good people do not need laws to tell them to
    act responsibly, while bad people will find a way
    around the laws.- Plato

10
St. Thomas The Good
  • St. Thomas Aquinas confirmed that doing good and
    avoiding evil is the first rule from which all
    others derive. He says that all the order of
    rules of natural law accords with natural human
    inclinations to preserve human life, to
    reproduce, to educated offspring, to know the
    truth about God, to live society, to shun
    ignorance, and to avoid offending others.

11
St. Thomas Eternal, Natural and Human Law
  • Aquinas was concerned with Eternal, Natural and
    Human law. He said that eternal law is the
    eternal government that is followed by the divine
    will of God. The natural law was the imprinting
    of eternal law on humans. Lastly, human law was
    view as training and habituating to become
    virtuous.

12
St. Thomas Aquinas Contribution to Jurisprudence
  • St. Thomas philosophy of law is heavily
    influenced by the teachings and doctrines of the
    Roman Catholic Church. St Thomas Aquinas
    contributed to jurisprudence through his
    teachings and belief that justice and rights
    spring from natural law rather then human law.
    Aquinas is credited with having a major influence
    on modern human rights theories on law. St.
    Thomas Aquinas has also drawn distinctions among
    eternal law natural law and human law.

13
Charter of Rights and Freedoms in Relation to
Natural Law
  • The Charter of Rights and Freedoms recognizes
    the principles of Natural law. This means that we
    are governed by the will of God and that law is
    most important. The Charter cannot take away any
    rights or freedoms that are essential to
    preserving human life.

14
Our Beliefs As A Group
  • We believe that humans in their nature strive to
    perform good acts, and one of these good acts is
    to from society for protection. If we were not
    born to do these things our original societies
    would never have been formed. If these people in
    those societies were not good to one another
    these cities would fall apart. We believe that
    all humans strive to find out their origins and
    try to better understand why we are and what our
    purpose is that we are to fulfil with our time on
    earth, but we would not say it is a call to God
    though, but instead and understanding of why we
    are.

15
Quick Facts
  • The patron of Universities and Students ?
    considered by many Catholics to be the Catholic
    Church's greatest theologian and philosopher.
  • Born c.1225 at Aquino, Naples, Italy
  • Memorial Day / Feast Day 28th January
  • Date of Death Saint Thomas Aquinas died on 7
    March 1274 at Fossanova Abbey, Lazio, Italy
  • Cause of Death Natural Causes ? was a Confessor
    ? Confessors are people who died natural deaths

16
Youtube
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1hzb-HcxUl4
  • (info video)
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vnYCxtvlqmeA
  • (Eucharist video 2 min)

17
Multiple Choice Questions
  • 1) What natural law did St. Thomas Aquinas
    believe in?
  • Culture
  • Morality
  • Religion
  • 2) What were the three types of laws Aquinas was
    concerned with?
  • Eternal, Natural, and Human
  • Unity, Spiritual, Good
  • Eternal, Unity, Natural
  • 3) Aquinas believed that successful people have
    four virtues, what are they?
  • Prudence, Love, Faith, Justice
  • Faith, Self Control, Respect, Temperance
  • Justice, Respect, Kindness, Faith
  • Temperance, Prudence, Justice, Fortitude

18
Multiple Choice Answers
  • 1) What natural law did St. Thomas Aquinas
    believe in?
  • Culture
  • Morality
  • Religion
  • 2) What were the three types of laws Aquinas was
    concerned with?
  • Eternal, Natural, and Human
  • Unity, Spiritual, Good
  • Eternal, Unity, Natural
  • 3) Aquinas believed that successful people have
    four virtues, what are they?
  • Prudence, Love, Faith, Justice
  • Faith, Self Control, Respect, Temperance
  • Justice, Respect, Kindness, Faith
  • Temperance, Prudence, Justice, Fortitude
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