Fr. 47.90

Images of Authority - A Consideration of the Concepts of Regnum and Sacerdotium

English · Hardback

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Klappentext Starting from the premise that supreme authority requires justification, and pointing out that from medieval times the authority of both Church and State has been deemed as delegated from God, Mr. Cameron investigates the relation between secular and religious authority and the role of the individual moral agent. If the highest authority derives from God, how are we to evaluate the claims of popes, kings, and the State? The individual, through witness of the Spirit and his own moral perceptions, has the right and obligation to evaluate the institutions and commands of authority; Mr. Cameron finds validity in use of the concept of "nature" as a moral criterion. Moral precepts are not, he argues, simply a matter of convention. It makes neither logical nor moral sense to set up a system that condones, for example, lying and murder, and he points to the Nuremberg trials as an illustration of the belief that man may not justify his wrongdoing as obedience to the State. In his final chapter, the author examines parochial education. As a philosopher and Catholic layman, he approves of the increasing secularization of social life. Separate schooling, an idea totally foreign to the early Church, is not in principle a Catholic requirement.

Product details

Authors J. M. Cameron
Publisher Yale University Press Ltd
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2008
 
EAN 9780300135800
ISBN 978-0-300-13580-0
No. of pages 108
Series The Terry Lectures
The Terry Lectures Series
Subject Non-fiction book > Philosophy, religion > Miscellaneous

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