Natural Law and Laws of Nature in Early Modern Europe
Natural Law and Laws of Nature in Early Modern Europe
Jurisprudence, Theology, Moral and Natural Philosophy
;
Taylor & Francis Ltd
12/2008
350
Dura
Inglês
9780754657613
15 a 20 dias
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Contents: Preface; Introduction: Nature, law, and natural law in early modern Europe, Lorraine Daston and Michael Stolleis; From limits to laws: the construction of the nomological image of nature in early modern philosophy, Catherine Wilson; Expressing nature's regularities and their determinations in the late Renaissance, Ian Maclean; The legitimation of law through God, tradition, will, nature and constitution, Michael Stolleis; The concept of (natural) law in the doctrine of law and natural law of the early modern era, Jan Schroder; 'Lex certa' and 'ius certum': the search for legal certainty and security, Heinz Mohnhaupt; Crimen contra naturam, Andreas Roth; Nature's regularity in some Protestant natural philosophy textbooks 1530-1630, Sachiko Kusukawa; Natural order and divine salvation: Protestant conceptions in early modern Germany (1550-1750), Anne-Charlott Trepp; Natural law and celestial regularities from Copernicus to Kepler, Gerd Grasshof; The approach to a physical concept of law in the early modern period: a comparison between Matthias Bernegger and Richard Cumberland, Hubert Treiber; Leibniz's concept of jus naturale and lex naturalis - defined 'with geometric certainty', Klaus Luig; Controversies on nature as universal legality (1680-1710), Sophie Roux; From principles to regularities: tracing 'laws of nature' in early modern France and England, Friedrich Steinle; Unruly weather: natural law confronts natural variability, Lorraine Daston; In search of the Newton of the moral world: the intelligibility of society and the naturalist model of law from the end of the17th century to the middle of the 18th century, Catherine Larrere; Deus legislator, Jean-Robert Armogathe; Bibliography; Index.
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Contents: Preface; Introduction: Nature, law, and natural law in early modern Europe, Lorraine Daston and Michael Stolleis; From limits to laws: the construction of the nomological image of nature in early modern philosophy, Catherine Wilson; Expressing nature's regularities and their determinations in the late Renaissance, Ian Maclean; The legitimation of law through God, tradition, will, nature and constitution, Michael Stolleis; The concept of (natural) law in the doctrine of law and natural law of the early modern era, Jan Schroder; 'Lex certa' and 'ius certum': the search for legal certainty and security, Heinz Mohnhaupt; Crimen contra naturam, Andreas Roth; Nature's regularity in some Protestant natural philosophy textbooks 1530-1630, Sachiko Kusukawa; Natural order and divine salvation: Protestant conceptions in early modern Germany (1550-1750), Anne-Charlott Trepp; Natural law and celestial regularities from Copernicus to Kepler, Gerd Grasshof; The approach to a physical concept of law in the early modern period: a comparison between Matthias Bernegger and Richard Cumberland, Hubert Treiber; Leibniz's concept of jus naturale and lex naturalis - defined 'with geometric certainty', Klaus Luig; Controversies on nature as universal legality (1680-1710), Sophie Roux; From principles to regularities: tracing 'laws of nature' in early modern France and England, Friedrich Steinle; Unruly weather: natural law confronts natural variability, Lorraine Daston; In search of the Newton of the moral world: the intelligibility of society and the naturalist model of law from the end of the17th century to the middle of the 18th century, Catherine Larrere; Deus legislator, Jean-Robert Armogathe; Bibliography; Index.
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