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Liberty, Right and Nature
Individual Rights in Later Scholastic Thought
A major re-evaluation of the history of our thinking about rights.
Annabel S. Brett (Author)
9780521543408, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 16 October 2003
272 pages
22.8 x 15.3 x 1.8 cm, 0.423 kg
Liberty, Right and Nature is a vibrant and powerful contribution to the recently renewed debate over natural rights and natural rights language. Annabel Brett argues persuasively that in order to understand the development of the concept we need to look at the way in which the Latin language of ius functioned in a wide range of philosophical contexts. Dr Brett traces the range of the terminology of rights within the scholastic tradition from the thirteenth-century poverty controversy to the works of the sixteenth-century neo-Thomistic 'School of Salamanca'. A final chapter considers the consequences of this investigation for the rights theory of Thomas Hobbes. Dr Brett's analysis covers a panoply of theological and legal sources, and should prove indispensable to all those working in the field of medieval and early modern moral and political philosophy.
Acknowledgements
Notes on the Text
Introduction
1. Right and liberty: the equivalence of dominium and ius
2. Our just nature: subjective right in the fourteenth century
3. Objective right and the Thomist tradition
4. Liberty and nature: subjective right and Thomism in the Spanish sixteenth century
5. The language of natural liberty: Fernando Vazquez de Menchaca
6. Natural liberty in the next century: the case of Thomas Hobbes
Bibliography.
Subject Areas: History of ideas [JFCX]
