Acts Amid Precepts: The Logical Structure of Thomas Aquinas's Moral Theology
By (Author) Dr. Raymond Flannery
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
6th September 2001
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Theology
171.2092
Hardback
465
710g
Although most natural law ethical theories recognize moral absolutes, there is not much agreement even among natural law theorists about how to identify them. The author argues that in order to understand and determine the morality (or immorality) of a human action, it must be considered in relation to the organized system of human practices within which it is performed. In order to depict this structure and to explain how it bears upon the analysis of action, the author investigates a number of issues that have attracted the attention of Thomistic and Aristotelian scholarship. He examines the nature of practical reason, its relationship with theoretical reason, the derivation of lower from higher ethical principles, the incommensurability of human goods, the relationship between will and intellect, and the principle of double effect.
Dr. Raymond B. Flannery, Jr. Ph.D., is the author of several books including "Preventing Youth Violence: A Guide for Parents, Teachers, and Counselors" (Continuum, 1999.) He is on the faculties of both Harvard Medical School and the University of Massachusetts Medical School. He works as a violence-prevention consultant both here and abroad. He lives in the suburbs of Boston.