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Author Hochstrasser, T. J. (Tim J.)

Title Natural law theories in the early Enlightenment / T.J. Hochstrasser.

Publication Info. Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2000.

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Description 1 online resource (xiii, 246 pages).
Series Ideas in context ; 58
Ideas in context ; 58.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 220-240) and index.
Note Print version record.
Contents 1. Introduction: natural law and its history in the early Enlightenment -- 2. Socialitas and the history of natural law: Pufendorf's defence of De Jure Naturae et Gentium -- 3. Voluntarism and moral epistemology: a comparison of Leibniz and Pufendorf -- 4. Christian Thomasius and the development of Pufendorf's natural jurisprudence -- 5. Natural law theory and its historiography in the era of Christian Wolff -- 6. Conclusion: the end of the 'history of morality' in Germany.
Summary "In this study T.J. Hochstrasser analyses and explains the development of natural law theories in Germany between Grotius and Kant. Particular attention is paid to Samuel Pufendorf and his followers, who incorporated many of the key theoretical insights of Thomas Hobbes into German political theory, and evolved a natural law theory based on human sociability and a self-sufficient concept of human reason. In so doing, they fostered a new methodology in German philosophy, eclecticism, which remained a major creative force in intellectual life down to the emergence of Kantian idealism.
This intellectual tradition is recovered through a detailed analysis of the so-called 'histories of morality', which assessed contemporary innovations in ethics and political philosophy by describing the progress of the discipline since ancient times, and thus constitute the first serious histories of political thought. Equal consideration is also given to rationalist attempts by Leibniz and Wolff to defend traditional scholastic natural law against Hobbes and the followers of Pufendorf, and thus the work offers a detailed account of the range and importance of natural law theories within Germany in the era of enlightened absolutism, up to and including the onset of the Kantian revolution in moral philosophy."--Jacket.
Subject Natural law -- History.
Enlightenment.
LAW -- Natural Law.
Enlightenment. (OCoLC)fst00912527
Natural law. (OCoLC)fst01034366
Natuurrecht.
Verlichting (cultuurgeschiedenis)
Naturrecht -- Deutschland -- Geschichte 17. Jh.
Naturrecht -- Deutschland -- Geschichte 18. Jh.
Naturrecht -- Philosophie -- Geschichte -- 1650-1750.
Germany -- Naturrecht -- Philosophie -- Geschichte -- 1650-1750.
Genre/Form History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
Other Form: Print version: Hochstrasser, T.J. (Tim J.). Natural law theories in the early Enlightenment. Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2000 (DLC) 99059885
ISBN 0511040636 (electronic bk.)
9780511040634 (electronic bk.)
9780511490552 (electronic bk.)
0511490550 (electronic bk.)
9780511048838 (electronic bk.)
0511048831 (electronic bk.)
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