6217
|
Natural law is supplied to the human mind by reality and human nature [Cumberland]
|
|
Full Idea:
Some truths of natural law, concerning guides to moral good and evil, and duties not laid down by civil law and government, are necessarily supplied ot the human mind by the nature of things and of men.
|
|
From:
Richard Cumberland (De Legibus Naturae [1672], Ch.I.I)
|
|
A reaction:
I agree that some moral truths have the power of self-evidence. If you say they are built into the mind, we now ask what did the building, and evolution is the only answer, and hence we distance ourselves from the truths, seeing them as strategies.
|
6221
|
If there are different ultimate goods, there will be conflicting good actions, which is impossible [Cumberland]
|
|
Full Idea:
If there be posited different ultimate ends, whose causes are opposed to each other, then there will be truly good actions likewise opposed to each other, which is impossible.
|
|
From:
Richard Cumberland (De Legibus Naturae [1672], Ch.V.XVI)
|
|
A reaction:
A very interesting argument for there being one good rather than many, and an argument which I don't recall in any surviving Greek text. A response might be to distinguish between what is 'right' and what is 'good'. See David Ross.
|
23405
|
Rituals escape natural chaos, and benefit everyone, by reshaping our motivations [Xunzi (Xun Kuang), by Norden]
|
|
Full Idea:
For Xunzi, everyone is better off with rituals …because they allow us to escape the chaotic state of nature. They do not merely set rules for entitlement, though. They are effective because they reshape human motivation.
|
|
From:
report of Xunzi (Xun Kuang) (The Xunzi [c.250 BCE]) by Bryan van Norden - Intro to Classical Chinese Philosophy 10.2
|
|
A reaction:
Rituals are a basic part of Confucianist thinking, and may be puzzling to outsiders. At there worst rituals are brain-washing, but teaching children good manners is a sort of ritual, meant to channel feelings in a healthy direction
|
15674
|
One can universalise good advice, but that doesn't make it an obligation [Finlayson]
|
|
Full Idea:
'Early to bed and early to rise' is a universalizable maxim, but, though it might be good advice, there is obviously no such obligation.
|
|
From:
James Gordon Finlayson (Habermas [2005], Ch.6:83)
|
|
A reaction:
I take it that Kant's rule won't distinguish moral guidance from prudential guidance. Unfair, I think. I may be a lark, but when I universalise this maxim I see that it can't be willed as a universal rule, because we should tolerate the owls.
|
6220
|
The happiness of all contains the happiness of each, and promotes it [Cumberland]
|
|
Full Idea:
The common happiness of all contains the greatest happiness for each, and most effectively promotes it. …There is no path leading anyone to his own happiness, other than the path which leads all to the common happiness.
|
|
From:
Richard Cumberland (De Legibus Naturae [1672], Ch.I.VI)
|
|
A reaction:
I take this as a revolutionary idea, which leads to utilitarianism. It is doing what seemed to the Greeks unthinkable, which is combining hedonism with altruism. There is no proof for it, but it is a wonderful clarion call for building a civil society.
|
6216
|
Natural law is immutable truth giving moral truths and duties independent of society [Cumberland]
|
|
Full Idea:
Natural law is certain propositions of immutable truth, which guide voluntary actions about the choice of good and avoidance of evil, and which impose an obligation to act, even without regard to civil laws, and ignoring compacts of governments.
|
|
From:
Richard Cumberland (De Legibus Naturae [1672], Ch.I.I)
|
|
A reaction:
Not a popular view, but I am sympathetic. If you are in a foreign country and find a person lying in pain, there is a terrible moral deficiency in anyone who just ignores such a thing. No legislation can take away a person's right of self-defence.
|