I was thinking more of hinge proposition as a foundation. — Banno
...they were said to be not rationally established, defended or challenged. That would be value-free law, — James Riley
After all, values do not need to be rationally established, defended or challenged.. — Banno
That ain't helpful — Banno
Ah, excellent. Glad to hear it. — Banno
A link might help, then. To what do you refer? — Banno
While I think Natural Law is at worst a chimera, at best a misnomer, I think that the more our judgments and decisions, including those regarding law, are guided by informed reasoning, the better they will be. — Ciceronianus the White
I suppose if you don't agree with it, then I have not understood your position. — Banno
What the Greeks understood by 'reason' is not what the term came to mean for us through modern philosophy. Anaxagoras said 'nous' (mind or intellect) orders the cosmos. Reason is a Latin term, from ratio, used to translate the Greek dianoia, discursive thinking. It differs from noesis, a kind of direct apprehension or seeing with the mind.
What the logos meant for Heraclitus is controversial. When he says: " ... all things come to pass in accordance with this Logos ...", he might mean that the Logos is the guiding force or he could simply mean that what he is about to tell us is the way things are, the truth. Preceding this he begins: "Although this Logos is eternally valid, yet men are unable to understand it – not only before hearing it, but even after they have heard it for the first time …".
It should noted that the Greek philosophers, in imitation of the Greek poets, placed the authority of what they said not with themselves but with God or the gods.
In the Phaedo Socrates says that he had been drawn to Anaxagoras' claim that Nous orders all things, but was disappointed to learn that he gave only physical explanations and did not say why things should be the way they are, that is, why it is best that they be this way. Socrates was left on his own to discover what is
best, that is, his "second sailing", his recourse to speech.
It is not divine reason made manifest in speech, but rather, human speech attempting to know what is best. — Fooloso4
This notion could come from the deserts where mirages are apt to happen. However, other cultures independently came with a notion of a trickster and tell about it in folktales. Jinn and tricksters violate the law as we know it.Etymology. Jinn is an Arabic collective noun deriving from the Semitic root JNN (Arabic: جَنّ / جُنّ , jann), whose primary meaning is 'to hide' or 'to adapt'.Some authors interpret the word to mean, literally, 'beings that are concealed from the senses'. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jinn — Wikipedia
Your sentence calls to mind something I wrote a few years ago, out to Utah and Arizona: — James Riley
Banno
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Natural law as legal hinge propositions... — Banno
I have no belief in the supernatural but I do recognize the power of myth and the imagination. — Fooloso4
Mala in se are the laws we're interested in here. — Hanover
It does appear you wish to prescribe a definition to the term "law" and require it only mean a specific codified written rule by a human law making body. That's simply not what the posters here take to be the definition of "law" within the the context of natural law though. — Hanover
As demonstrated in the same post, Natural Law (justified) is not misusing the term "law." It's not addressing "law" at all. — James Riley
And that is why the law now operates largely by the stick and not by persuasion of reason. — James Riley
As demonstrated in the same post, Natural Law (justified) is not misusing the term "law." It's not addressing "law" at all.
— James Riley
Well clearly, to call something a law when it doesn't address law at all couldn't be a misuse of the word "law"! Who would think that something called a "law" would have anything to do with law? — Ciceronianus the White
Ah. I'm curious. When did the law operate by "persuasion of reason"? — Ciceronianus the White
That "we" doesn't include me. I'm addressing the law, which includes zoning laws and other laws. I don't think we can select particular laws and use them to define what the law consists of, if we want to define and analyze what this interesting thing called "the law" we humans create is and means, and how it functions. — Ciceronianus the White
We lawyers don't practice natural law; we're not "natural lawyers." When we attended law school, you and I weren't taught how to be good,or just, or moral, nor were we taught that the law we were to practice was what God or nature established. We weren't admitted to the bar because we were learned in natural law or ethics. The Uniform Commercial Code wasn't written in heaven (especially that portion of it relating to commercial paper, which it is more likely would have been written in hell). — Ciceronianus the White
We can all agree that laws should be just. I would agree, in fact, that laws should be in accord with reason. But we fool ourselves and create confusion when we insist that laws which aren't just or reasonable don't constitute laws, or aren't part of the law. — Ciceronianus the White
Ever since it tried to get along without the stick. — James Riley
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