Joshua Neoh (Australian National University) has posted Political Natural Law ((2019) 44 Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 116) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
The précis of Jonathan Crowe’s latest book, 'Natural Law and the Nature of Law', claims that "this book provides the first systematic, book-length defence of natural law ideas in ethics, politics and jurisprudence since John Finnis’s influential 'Natural Law and Natural Rights’." As a sign of its richness, there are many aspects of the book that I could focus on in this essay, but I will just focus on one question, which is a fundamental one for the natural law position: where do basic goods come from? Part I will begin with Finnis’s answer to this question, and Crowe’s critique of Finnis on this point. Part II will analyse Crowe’s alternative answer to the question. Part III will endorse Crowe’s alternative answer, albeit with a friendly addendum.
Link to the book in the abstract.
