The Future of Natural Law  @LumenChristiInt
The Future of Natural Law  @LumenChristiInt
Lumen Christi Institute | The Future of Natural Law @LumenChristiInt | Uploaded November 2022 | Updated October 2024, 18 hours ago.
A symposium with Fr. Kevin Flannery, S.J. (Pontifical Gregorian University), John Bowlin (Princeton Theological Seminary), and Scott Roniger (Loyola Marymount University), held in Swift Hall, at the University of Chicago, October 27, 2022.

---

Natural law theory has long been a central tenet of Christian philosophical and theological reflection on the relationship between God, the moral life, and society, and it has played an important historical role in shaping the political life of the United States and many other nations. The topic of natural law has also been the subject of many disputes and disagreements, both in the contemplative and practical orders. It is therefore important to take stock of this rich and complex history if we are to understand the current state of natural law thinking so as to ascertain what role it may play in the future.

This event is the public portion of an invite-only faculty colloquium in honor of Russell Hittinger. Hittinger has articulated many of the deepest Augustinian and Thomistic sources of natural law theory, given an influential critique of certain trends in contemporary natural law thinking, and shown how various conceptions of natural law have been embraced or rejected in American political debates since the middle of the twentieth century. Finally, his most recent work has shown how natural law principles have been integrated into Catholic social teaching since the French Revolution. This discussion will use Hittinger’s writings as a springboard to explore these perennial and timely topics in order to see where the potential for future developments and applications of natural law theory may be found.
The Future of Natural LawCardinal Francis George, the American Contribution to Catholic Social Thought, & Our Current MomentAutomation and the Future of Work: Insights from Economics and Catholic Social ThoughtBecoming Human in Light of the Gospel of JohnKingship: The Politics of Enchantment Francis OakleyRomano Guardini on Technology and the LiturgyChicago Catholics and the Quest for Interracial JusticeA School for the Lord’s Service: A Meditation on the Rule of St. BenedictDante as Poet and Philosopher, with Jason Aleksander and Arielle SaiberWomen Humanists in the Renaissance: Paradise and Free Speech in Moderata Fonte, ft. Tamara AlbertiniNicholas of Cusa & Qur’anic ExegesisScience and Theology of Habitable Worlds Around Other Stars

The Future of Natural Law @LumenChristiInt

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER