Description
Part One: Articulating a Theory of Natural Law contains three sections in which Boyle defends the reality of free choice and the view that the basic reasons for action, or first principles of natural law, are incommensurable in goodness. Boyle identifies the basic moral standard for choice and action, and develops an account of human action that elucidates the important role played by intention and double effect in their moral evaluation.
The essays in Part Two: Natural Law Theory and Contemporary Moral Problems demonstrate the strength and scope of Boyle's natural law account, as he brings it to bear upon just war theory, property and welfare rights, and issues in bioethics. The essays in bioethics address the difficult question of whether it is appropriate to tube-feed patients in persistent vegetative state, and include an unpublished essay, "Against Assisted Death," which he delivered as the Anscombe Lecture at The Anscombe Bioethics Centre in Oxford about a year before he died.
This volume also includes a Foreword by Princeton's Robert P. George; an Introduction by the editors that highlights Boyle's contribution to the development of the new classical natural law theory; and a bibliography of Boyle's publications.
About the Author
Joseph Boyle (1942-2016) was professor emeritus of philosophy at St Michael's College of the University of Toronto.
John Liptay is associate professor of philosophy, St. Thomas More College, University of Saskatchewan.
Christopher Tollefsen is professor of philosophy, University of South Carolina.
Book Information
ISBN 9780813232959
Author Joseph Boyle
Format Paperback
Page Count 352
Imprint The Catholic University of America Press
Publisher The Catholic University of America Press
Weight(grams) 583g