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Book Synopsis
A Treatise of the Laws of Nature, originally titled De Legibus Naturae, first appeared in 1672 as a theoretical response to a range of issues that came together during the late 1660s. It conveyed a conviction that science might offer an effective means of demonstrating both the contents and the obligatory force of the law of nature. At a time when Hobbes''s work appeared to suggest that the application of science undermined rather than supported the idea of obligatory natural law, Cumberland''s De Legibus Naturae provided a scientific explanation of the natural necessity of altruism. Through his argument for a moral obligation to natural law, Cumberland made a critical intervention in the early debate over the role of natural jurisprudence at a moment when the natural law project was widely suspected of heterodoxy and incoherence. This is the first modern edition of A Treatise of the Laws of Nature, based on John Maxwell''s English translation of 1727. The edition includes Maxwell''s e

Treatise of the Laws of Nature Natural Law and

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    A Paperback / softback by Richard Cumberland

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      View other formats and editions of Treatise of the Laws of Nature Natural Law and by Richard Cumberland

      Publisher: Liberty Fund Inc
      Publication Date: 21/02/2005
      ISBN13: 9780865974739, 978-0865974739
      ISBN10: 086597473X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A Treatise of the Laws of Nature, originally titled De Legibus Naturae, first appeared in 1672 as a theoretical response to a range of issues that came together during the late 1660s. It conveyed a conviction that science might offer an effective means of demonstrating both the contents and the obligatory force of the law of nature. At a time when Hobbes''s work appeared to suggest that the application of science undermined rather than supported the idea of obligatory natural law, Cumberland''s De Legibus Naturae provided a scientific explanation of the natural necessity of altruism. Through his argument for a moral obligation to natural law, Cumberland made a critical intervention in the early debate over the role of natural jurisprudence at a moment when the natural law project was widely suspected of heterodoxy and incoherence. This is the first modern edition of A Treatise of the Laws of Nature, based on John Maxwell''s English translation of 1727. The edition includes Maxwell''s e

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