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The Natural Law w/ Fr. Dominic Legge, O.P. (Aquinas 101) - YouTube
Channel: The Thomistic Institute
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St. Thomas Aquinas' teaching
on natural law and its relation to human law
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has had an enormous influence, but it isn't
always easy for us to understand it unless
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we grasp the deep roots it has in his wider
thought, centered on God.
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In a previous video, we saw that
the eternal law is the highest kind of law.
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Aquinas says that it is the eternal plan of
order in the mind of God for the whole universe,
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and further, that this plan is, in a certain
way, in the creatures that God creates so
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that they have an inclination or tendency
to their own proper acts and ends according
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to where they fit in this vast and beautiful
divine plan.
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This eternal law, this plan of God, is imprinted
in rational creatures, like human beings,
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in a special way.
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And Aquinas calls this the natural law.
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He says that the natural law is the rational
creature's participation in the eternal law.
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What does that mean?
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We are capable of understanding the world
around us, grasping with our minds what is
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good for us to do and moving ourselves to
do it according to this rational desire, which
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we call our will.
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That means that we have a higher participation
in God's providential plan than other creatures
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do, because we can understand it and become
willing agents in bringing it to completion
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for ourselves, for others, and for our communities.
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Let's unpack this.
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Like other lower creatures, we have certain
inclinations or tendencies that are natural
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to us.
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They're a part of our natures, features of
the kind of creatures we are.
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The natures of inanimate things, of plants,
of animals, entirely determine their movements.
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A stone goes down.
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A tree flowers in the spring.
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A cow eats grass.
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These actions are natural to these kinds of
things.
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Human beings are like these things
in a certain way.
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We're creatures with material bodies, and
so, like other animals, we have an inclination
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to remain in being, to seek food and self
preservation, to reproduce and to raise offspring.
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Yet, unlike these creatures, we are endowed
with the power of reason, which means that
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we're not simply moved by brute force or instinct.
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We have something higher, a spiritual soul,
which gives our nature a spiritual dimension.
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Now, on this point, there's often
a very deep misunderstanding.
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Our spiritual nature is the basis for our
ability to understand and to make free choices.
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It gives us a higher perspective on our lower
or bodily inclinations and desires, so that,
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for example, we can decide at a particular
moment that we will not eat right now, even
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though we're hungry.
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But here is the key point.
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Our spiritual nature is not opposed to our
natural inclinations.
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In fact, it also has its own natural inclinations.
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And these inclinations, which belong to us
because of the spiritual dimension of the
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human person, don't determine our movements
and actions, but rather they're the source
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and the cause of them.
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Our spiritual nature lies at the root of our
freedom and gives it its vital energy.
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Consider what we mean when we say,
"I'm thirsting for the truth."
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We're using an analogy.
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We all know what it's like to be thirsty.
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A biological inclination like this sometimes
directs our appetite in a very compelling
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way.
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But is thirst contrary to our freedom?
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No.
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It's an eating and drinking that we have the
physical strength to do all the other things
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that we do.
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Is our thirst for the truth an
obstacle or limit to our freedom?
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Well, obviously not.
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What we're trying to express is actually the
root of our free desire to know the truth.
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And anyone who's ever been drawn to a particular
subject and who thirsts to know more about
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it, realizes that this thirst, this love for
the subject, doesn't decrease freedom, but
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actually is the root of our free activity
by which we learn more and more about what
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we love.
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In other words, our spiritual inclinations
are real.
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They're really a part of our spiritual nature
and they're not blind determinations that
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limit our freedom, rather, they're its very
source and they spur it on.
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Let's now return to the idea of
the eternal law.
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Aquinas teaches that God has imprinted in
creatures their inclinations to their proper
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acts and ends in accordance with God's eternal
plan.
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And likewise, that He's imprinted these inclinations
in human beings in a higher way, we have inclinations
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that belong to us in virtue of our spiritual
nature.
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We're now in a better position
to understand what Aquinas means by his famous
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claim that the precepts of the natural law
follow the order of our natural inclinations.
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He means that as we understand the inclinations
of our spiritual nature, we come to grasp
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what God made a human being to be and what
human life is ordered to.
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And so, we come to know what a human being
ought to do and avoid.
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St. Thomas lists five principle
natural inclinations.
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The inclination to the good, that is, to what
perfects us.
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The inclination to self-preservation, for
example, to seek food, shelter, clothing,
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to avoid threats to our life.
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The inclination to sexual union and the upbringing
of offspring.
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The inclination to knowing the truth.
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And the inclination to living in society,
which includes the inclination to friendship
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and to justice and fairness towards others.
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Of course, some people might sometimes
act contrary to one or another of these inclinations,
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and there's always the possibility that, due
to sin, our desires will become distorted.
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But Aquinas thinks that these five inclinations
really are features of the kind of beings
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that we are, and that they give us a fundamental
orientation towards what will make us increasingly
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happy and increasingly free.
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It's important to see that for Saint Thomas,
natural law is thus not imposed on us by some
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alien will that commands us from above.
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It's rather, the very design of our being.
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As we come to know this with our
minds, we're then able to participate intentionally
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and freely in this plan.
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We order ourselves, our actions, beings lower
than us and even our communities, according
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to this plan, by the use of our freedom.
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This is, in an important sense, the very purpose
of our freedom, that we would be the creatures
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that order ourselves freely and knowingly
to God, according to His plan.
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Let's conclude with some brief
remarks on the relation between natural law
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and human law.
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Aquinas thinks that a human law is only just
when it's in accord with a natural law.
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And that laws that conflict with the natural
law are not morally binding.
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The natural law is most clear with
respect to certain general and negative precepts.
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For example, the precepts of the Ten Commandments.
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Theft, murder, lying, adultery and other sexual
sins, suicide, these are wrong always and
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everywhere, because they're contrary to what
the natural law teaches us is the good for
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human beings.
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Self-preservation, sexual union and the raising
of children, truth, life together in society.
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Positive precepts are a different
case because they're harder to apply.
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We might all agree with the precepts be brave,
be just, but there are many ways we can do
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these things and some of them might be better
than others.
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That's why Aquinas thinks the negative precepts
of the natural law are more easily known and
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apply always and everywhere, while the positive
precepts don't necessarily apply in every
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circumstance.
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Aquinas thinks that an important
part of the job of human lawmakers is to specify
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and apply the general precepts of the natural
law in a particular context and for a particular
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community.
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Then, always respecting what the natural law
demands in it's negative precepts, human lawmakers
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should write laws that order their community
towards its common good.
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For readings, podcasts, and more videos like this, go to Aquinas101.com.
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While you're there, be sure to sign up for one of our free video courses on Aquinas.
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And don't forget to like and share with your friends, because it matters what you think.
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