This book offers a systematic exposition of Aristotle's legal thought. It argues that Aristotle's seemingly dispersed statements on legislation and law are unified by a commitment to law's status as an achievement of practical reason. It will appeal to scholars and students in jurisprudence, philosophy, political science, and classics.
This book offers a systematic exposition of Aristotle's legal thought. It argues that Aristotle's seemingly dispersed statements on legislation and law are unified by a commitment to law's status as an achievement of practical reason. It will appeal to scholars and students in jurisprudence, philosophy, political science, and classics.
George Duke is Associate Professor at Deakin University, Victoria. His main research areas are the philosophy of law, constitutional theory, and the history of political and legal thought. Duke has published in a wide-range of international journals on these topics, including Classical Quarterly, Legal Theory, Ancient Philosophy, History of Political Thought, International Journal of Constitutional Law, and European Law Review. He is also the co-editor of The Cambridge Companion to Natural Law Jurisprudence (2017).
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Law as rational restraint 2. The legislator 3. The constitutional relativity of law 4. The common advantage and political justice 5. Stability and obedience 6. Natural justice and natural law 7. Equity and the spoudaios Conclusion References Index.
Introduction 1. Law as rational restraint 2. The legislator 3. The constitutional relativity of law 4. The common advantage and political justice 5. Stability and obedience 6. Natural justice and natural law 7. Equity and the spoudaios Conclusion References Index.
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