Description

Book Synopsis
Corrective and Distributive Justice: From Aristotle to Modern Times retraces the intricate history of the distinction between corrective and distributive justice. This distinction is elaborated in the 5th book of Aristotle''s Nicomachean Ethics, which was rediscovered in Western Europe in the 12th and 13th centuries by the Scholastics and turned into a central topic in legal and theological scholarship. After a decline of interest in the wake of the enlightenment and secularization, a surprising revival of these notions of justice occurred in U.S. legal and philosophical discourse during the last four decades that has made this distinction a central issue in tort law, restitution and other important fields of private and public law. In literally hundreds of articles and a considerable number of books, the Aristotelian distinction has been elaborated, discussed, and applied. Englard''s unique contribution to this aspect of legal history grants the contemporary reader a historical persp

Trade Review
Englard performs a great service for which he deserves our thanks: visiting many European libraries he has sought out the books, studied them carefully, and told us (with considerable patience and with a disarming lack of pretension) what they have to about the Aristotelian distinction. In addition to covering scholastic, post-scholastic and modern texts, Engard also offers us interesting chapters that discuss the theological problem of divine justice, the Jewish commentators on Aristotle, and the iconography of the Aritstotelian distinction. His book therefore provides a valuable resource both for legal philosophers and for legal historians. * The Cambridge Law Journal *

Table of Contents
Chapter 1: The Starting Point: Aristotle's Classification of Justice ; Chapter 2: High Scholastics ; Chapter 3: Late Scholastics ; Chapter 4: A Special Theological Problem: Divine Justice ; Chapter 5: Jewish Commentators ; Chapter 6: Post Scholastic Writers ; Chapter 7: The Modern Use of Aristotle's Forms of Justice ; Index

Corrective and Distributive Justice From Aristotle to Modern Times

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    A Hardback by Izhak Englard

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      View other formats and editions of Corrective and Distributive Justice From Aristotle to Modern Times by Izhak Englard

      Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
      Publication Date: 2/26/2009 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780195380071, 978-0195380071
      ISBN10: 019538007X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Corrective and Distributive Justice: From Aristotle to Modern Times retraces the intricate history of the distinction between corrective and distributive justice. This distinction is elaborated in the 5th book of Aristotle''s Nicomachean Ethics, which was rediscovered in Western Europe in the 12th and 13th centuries by the Scholastics and turned into a central topic in legal and theological scholarship. After a decline of interest in the wake of the enlightenment and secularization, a surprising revival of these notions of justice occurred in U.S. legal and philosophical discourse during the last four decades that has made this distinction a central issue in tort law, restitution and other important fields of private and public law. In literally hundreds of articles and a considerable number of books, the Aristotelian distinction has been elaborated, discussed, and applied. Englard''s unique contribution to this aspect of legal history grants the contemporary reader a historical persp

      Trade Review
      Englard performs a great service for which he deserves our thanks: visiting many European libraries he has sought out the books, studied them carefully, and told us (with considerable patience and with a disarming lack of pretension) what they have to about the Aristotelian distinction. In addition to covering scholastic, post-scholastic and modern texts, Engard also offers us interesting chapters that discuss the theological problem of divine justice, the Jewish commentators on Aristotle, and the iconography of the Aritstotelian distinction. His book therefore provides a valuable resource both for legal philosophers and for legal historians. * The Cambridge Law Journal *

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1: The Starting Point: Aristotle's Classification of Justice ; Chapter 2: High Scholastics ; Chapter 3: Late Scholastics ; Chapter 4: A Special Theological Problem: Divine Justice ; Chapter 5: Jewish Commentators ; Chapter 6: Post Scholastic Writers ; Chapter 7: The Modern Use of Aristotle's Forms of Justice ; Index

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