Rommen next looks at the Natural Law in the Age of
Individualism and Reason. When I came to
this chapter, I thought “What is this guy talking about? The Age of Reason killed the Natural Law.” Well, it is a very worthwhile chapter.
Rommen identifies Samuel von Pufendorf, building on Hugo
Grotius, as the beginning of the “so-called age of natural law”:
The net result of the age was a
disastrous setback, from the opening of the nineteenth century, for the
natural-law idea among the modern philosophers and practitioners of law who
were unacquainted with the older Christian tradition.
I have written of
Grotius before, comparing his ideas unfavorably to the ideas of Johannes Althusius. But who is Pufendorf?
Freiherr Samuel von Pufendorf (8
January 1632 – 13 October 1694) was a German jurist, political philosopher,
economist and historian. …Among his achievements are his commentaries and
revisions of the natural law theories of Thomas Hobbes and Hugo Grotius.
Pufendorf was familiar to American
political writers such as Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and Thomas
Jefferson. His political concepts are part of the cultural background of the
American Revolution.
An influential fellow.
Rommen attaches him to “so-called,” so you can imagine that Rommen is
not favorably disposed toward him.
Deism was the theology of the age – no mystical influence of
any transcendent Deity. Reason, not faith,
would provide true enlightenment. From the
time of Pufendorf, fun began to be poked at the “fancies of the Scholastics.” From here on, an anti-Aristotelian nominalism
carried the day as the basis for philosophy.
The thesis of the autonomy of human
reason, as well as the view that the existing law constituted unwarranted fetters,
was closely bound up with the nascent socio-philosophical individualism of the
age.
Fair warning: Rommen will write positively of the
state. To the extent he means government
or governance, I am generally agreeable to this (agreeable more to the latter,
but you get my point). If he means state
as the term is known since the Renaissance, I don’t like it. It isn’t clear his meaning, and I am free to
ignore his admonishments on this point.
The foundational idea for this modern natural law was to
consider man as coming from a state of nature – Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe
of 1719. Thinkers of this age did not
set out from the social nature of man (to include marriage, family, community,
and religion), yet this is, in fact, how man was formed – the world every man
was born into. Instead, everything was
contract – including the social contract.
Absent the integration of this social reality, each new
natural law thinker was free to introduce his own foundation from which to build
his natural law framework: for Hobbes, selfishness; for Pufendorf,
sociableness; for Thomasius, happiness – a “praiseworthy, pleasant, carefree
life.”
Who is Thomasius?
Christian Thomasius (1 January 1655
– 23 September 1728) was a German jurist and philosopher.
His father, a lecturer at Leipzig University, brought him
under the influence of Grotius and Pufendorf.
Thomasius (the son) was a bit radical, lecturing in German instead of
Latin, ridiculed the pedantic weaknesses of the learned, and defended mixed marriages
of Lutherans and Calvinists. “He also
published a volume on natural law which emphasized natural reason….” For all of this, he was denounced from the
pulpits.
Though not a profound philosophical
thinker, Thomasius prepared the way for great reforms in philosophy, as well as
in law, literature, social life and theology. It was his mission to introduce a
rational, common-sense point of view, and to bring the divine and human sciences
to bear on the everyday world.
Returning to Rommen, thinkers such as these displayed little
understanding or interest of the graduated social order in social life. They would introduce the idea that natural
law was in force before there was any social life. This natural law would cover civil laws of
contract, marriage, family life, inheritance, and property.
When put in these words, it sure seems a strange notion to
me: why have a need for law – natural or otherwise – before social life? Robinson Crusoe needed no laws before Friday
arrived.
Whether in revolutionary forms (Rousseau), conservative (Hobbes),
or reformist (the enlightened despot), all built on this idea of a state of
nature and the Stoic notion of the pre-political state of man. Rousseau would build on his optimistic view
of human nature, Hobbes on his pessimistic view, and Pufendorf and Thomasius lived
in the shadow of enlightened despotism.
The Enlightenment was first of all
an affair of the ruling class, the nobility and the intellectuals of the age,
clerics and men of science.
The latter were encouraged by the princes, because they
would provide intellectual cover for the princes’ function of governing as a
duty. This enlightened natural law, in
the hands of enlightened despots, would be used to break down the various
intermediating institutions that stood in the way of a uniform administration
of the state.
First on the list for many was the Church, or Christianity
more broadly. While the revolutionaries
would crush it, those like Hobbes and the enlightened despots would work to
subsume Christianity and independent ecclesiastical law under the omnipotent
state.
There is some depth and background here for the work Robert
Nisbet has done in his book, The
Quest for Community; I have covered this book with several posts. It also rings true with the work that is
being done at Bastion Magazine.
Conclusion
Luke
5: 37 And no one pours new wine into old wineskins. Otherwise, the new wine
will burst the skins; the wine will run out and the wineskins will be ruined.
38 No, new wine must be poured into new wineskins. 39 And no one after drinking
old wine wants the new, for they say, ‘The old is better.’”
The new wine of enlightened natural law has burst the old
wineskin of – call it – metaphysical natural law. We have suffered and continue to suffer under
this calamity for more than a hundred years.
Many people are starting to notice that the old wine is certainly
better.
This chapter of Rommen’s book continues with a more detailed
examination of these new natural law thinkers, including Hobbes, Rousseau,
Locke and others. I will cover these in
a subsequent post.
BM, I watched the VanderKlay talk on John 5 where he goes into Biblical transmission, translation, and interpretation.
ReplyDeleteI know you didn't link to the video in this blog but I couldn't find where you did. I still wanted to recommend that to everyone else to watch.
It is an excellent intro to thinking about the Bible itself, where it comes from, how we have what we have today, and what level of authority does it have over our lives.
I would suggest reading Bruce Metzger to get more information about the subjects VanderKlay mentions. It is a fascinating topic to me learning about transmission and textual criticism. Getting into the weeds has increased my confidence in the Bible and its teachings.
It is in the comments for the post "Augustine's Wisdom," but I replicate it here:
Deletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hr6e-BhDoL8
VanderKlay is really remarkable. Pastor of a dying (certainly not growing) church in Sacramento who a) is tremendously learned, and b) has built a YouTube following of more than 13,000 subscribers.
He is a great teacher who is in a difficult place for the gospel. He probably needs to try to have those kinds of conversations outside the church in Sacramento. Not all would listen, but some would.
Delete