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Natural Law Ethics in Theory and Practice: A Joseph Boyle Reader PDF

377 Pages·2020·2.152 MB·English
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Natural Law Ethics in Theory & Practice Natural Law Ethics in Theory & Practice A Joseph Boyle ReAdeR Edited by John Liptay & Christopher Tollefsen Foreword by Robert P. George The CATholiC UniveRsiTy of AmeRiCA pRess Washington, D.C. Copyright © 2020 The Catholic University of America Press All rights reserved The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standards for Information Science—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, Ansi Z39.48-1984. ∞ Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Boyle, Joseph M., 1942– author. | Liptay, John J., editor. | Tollefsen, Christopher, editor. | George, Robert P., writer of foreword. Title: Natural law ethics in theory and practice : a Joseph Boyle reader / edited by John Liptay and Christopher Tollefsen ; foreword by Robert P. George. Description: Washington, D.C : The Catholic University of America Press, [2020] | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: lCCn 2020021130 | isBn 9780813232959 (paperback) | isBn 9780813232966 (ebook) Subjects: lCsh: Natural law—Philosophy. Classification: lCC K420 .B69 2020 | ddC 340/.112—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020021130 • To Barbara Boyle In memory of Joseph M. Boyle Contents Foreword by Robert P. George ix Acknowledgments xiii • Introduction: Joseph Boyle and Natural Law Ethics John Liptay & Christopher Tollefsen / 1 pART 1. ARTiCUlATing A TheoRy of nATURAl lAw Section 1. Determinism, Reasons for Action, Free Choice, and Incommensurability 1. Is Determinism Self-Refuting? / 23 2. Reasons for Action: Evaluative Cognitions That Underlie Motivations / 38 3. Free Choice, Incomparably Valuable Options, and Incommensurable Categories of Good / 61 Section 2. The Nature and Foundations of Natural Law 4. Being Reasonable in Choosing among Incommensurable Goods / 85 5. On the Most Fundamental Principle of Morality / 108 vii viii ConTenTs Section 3. Intention and Double Effect 6. Double Effect and a Certain Type of Embryotomy / 133 7. Toward Understanding the Principle of Double Effect / 151 8. Intention, Permissibility, and the Structure of Agency / 165 pART 2. nATURAl lAw TheoRy And ConTempoRARy moRAl pRoBlems Section 1. Justice in War 9. An Immoral Kind of Deterrence / 189 10. Traditional Just War Theory and Humanitarian Intervention / 205 Section 2. Private Property and Welfare Rights 11. Natural Law, Ownership, and the World’s Natural Resources / 231 12. Fairness in Holdings: A Natural Law Account of Property and Welfare Rights / 248 Section 3. Bioethics 13. Personal Responsibility and Freedom in Health Care: A Contemporary Natural Law Perspective / 275 14. A Case for Sometimes Tube-Feeding Patients in Persistent Vegetative State / 306 15. Against “Assisted Death” / 319 Bibliography 337 Index 353 Foreword During his lifetime, Joseph Boyle was admired above all for the analyt- ical rigor of his philosophical writings. Readers of this posthumously published volume who are encountering his essays for the first time will no doubt be struck by that feature. What struck me, however, and will, I suspect, strike others who have read these essays before, is Boyle’s creativity. This is a quality of his work that was underappreciated in his lifetime—including by me. It was not a matter of devising new concepts or conceptual tools— an almost standard way in which creativity manifests itself, when it does manifest itself, in the work of analytic philosophers like Boyle. Rather, it is a matter of noticing things that others hadn’t noticed or, in any event, that others had left unremarked or unexplored. This is the sort of creativity that is underwritten by a willingness to examine phil- osophical problems from new or multiple angles. And often enough, this willingness is in turn underwritten by a commitment to precision of thought and strict logical scrupulosity—analytical rigor. A good example of what I am talking about is Boyle’s work demonstrating the connections between the incommensurability of more-than-merely-instrumental reasons for actions—basic human goods as they figure in concrete options for choosing—and metaphys- ical freedom (freedom of the will; “libertarian” free choice) and, con- versely, the connections between the belief (mistaken in Boyle’s view, and mine) in the commensurability of the human goods that provide more-than-merely-instrumental reasons (a commensurability that is necessarily presupposed by utilitarian and other consequentialist ap- proaches to ethics) and the denial of true metaphysical freedom. As the editors of this volume point out in their introduction, what Boyle shows is that the availability of options that are not commensurable is a con- ix

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