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Augustine and Modern Law
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Augustine and Modern Law book
Augustine and Modern Law
DOI link for Augustine and Modern Law
Augustine and Modern Law book
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ABSTRACT
St. Augustine and Roman law are the two bridges from Athens and Jerusalem to the world of modern law. Augustine's almost eerily modern political realism was based upon his deep appreciation of human evil, arising from his insights into the human personality, the product of his reflections on his own life and the history of his times. These insights have traveled well through the ages and are mirrored in the pages of Aquinas, Luther and Calvin, Reinhold Niebuhr, and Hannah Arendt. The articles in this volume describe the life and world of Augustine and the ways in which he conceived both justice and law. They also discuss the little recognized Augustinian contributions to the field of modern hermeneutics - the discipline which informs the art of legal interpretation. Finally, they include Augustine's valuable discussion of church/state relations, the law of just wars, and proper role and limits of coercion, and the procreative dimensions of marriage. The volume also includes an extremely useful, definitive bibliography of Augustine and the law, and will leave readers with an increased appreciation of the contributions which Augustine has made to the history of jurisprudence. No one can read Augustine and these articles on his view of the law without taking away a new view of the law itself.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|41 pages
Augustine: His Life and His World
part II|125 pages
Two Cities: Justice in the Early and Divine Community
chapter 4|29 pages
The Origin and Dynamics of Society and the State According to St. Augustine Part I
chapter 6|22 pages
Justice as the Foundation of the Political Community: Augustine and his Pagan Models
chapter 7|12 pages
The Problem of Service to Unjust Regimes in Augustine’s City of God
chapter 8|17 pages
Pluralism and Secularism in the Political Order: St. Augustine and Theoretical Liberalism*
part III|82 pages
Augustine’s Philosophy of Political Authority and Law
chapter 9|23 pages
The Fundamental Ideas in St. Augustine’s Philosophy of Law
chapter 10|33 pages
Two Conceptions of Political Authority: Augustine, De Civitate Dei, XIX. 14–15, and some Thirteenth-Century Interpretations
part IV|127 pages
Selected Fundamental Principles of Jurisprudence and Political Theory
chapter 12|20 pages
Will and Order: The Moral Self in Augustine’s De Libero Arbitrio
chapter 14|29 pages
St. Augustine and the Christian Idea of Progress: The Background of the City of God*
part V|134 pages
Applications of Augustine’s Thought to Selected Legal Topics