Norms of Morality

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ETERNAL LAW

NORMS OF PARTICIPATION OF CREATURES IN


ETERNAL LAW

MORALITY NATURAL LAW AS THE ESSENTIAL


NEED TO BECOME A PERSON

PROPERTIES OF NATURAL LAW

CONTENTS OF NATURAL LAW


Morality is a universal phenomenon. We learn the good and bad such as the
truth and lie. Norms in general is the standard measurement. It is an
instrument which the quality or quantity of thing is determined.

The norms of morality are the standards that indicate he rightfulness or


wrongfulness, the goodness or evilness, he value or disvalue of thing.

RICHARD M. GULA defines norms of morality as “the criteria of judgment


about the sorts of actions we ought to perform”.
Judges in a contest follow a given criteria for deciding the winner. In like
manner, for us to decide what action is good or bad, we need a criteria, a set
of principles from which we deduce our conclusion.
Morality may then defined as the quality of things manifesting their conformity or non conformity with the norm
or criteria. Conforms is good to bad. That which do not conform is evil or immoral.
The remote norm f morality is Natural Law. The proximate norm of morality is Conscience. Both natural law
and conscience are rooted on Eternal Law, the ultimate norm. Thus, there is only one norm which is Eternal Law.

ETERNAL LAW
 Is the plan of God in creating the universe and is assigning to each creature therein a specific
nature.
 St. Thomas Aquinas states that it is “the exemplar of divine wisdoms directing all actions and
movements”.
 According to St.Agustine “it is the divine reason or will of God commanding the natural order of
things be preserved and forbidding that it be distributed”.
 It provides for the cosmic order where every creature stands different and independent but not
apart from the unified purpose of creation. There is harmony in diversity in the universe so that
the early Greeks referred to it as “cosmos”, meaning beautiful.
PARTICIPATION OF CREATURES IN ETERNAL LAW

Science speaks of natural law as the physical laws or properties governing. For
example the movement of atoms and molecules , of chemicals , of plants and of
animals, including man himself.
Man, however, on account of rational nature, manifests a new dimension in the
cosmic order. A moral order whereby man becomes self-conscious of natural
moral laws binding him to seek the good “fitting” his rational nature.
We discern what is good and evil. The function of natural law is to imprint on
us the divine light. Therefore , evident that the natural law is nothing else than
the rational creatures participation of the eternal law.
NATURAL LAW AS THE ESSENTIAL NEED TO
BECOME A PERSON

Natural law is recognized by all men regardless of creed, race, culture, or historical
circumstances. Philosophers agree that an inner force compels man towards good and away
from evil. In this sense they speak of morality as being written in the hearts of men.
Stewart Dugald regards the natural law as the “original principle of our constitution “.
George Berkeley calls it the “eternal laws of reason” or the “Will of God”.
Paul Tillich elaborates that what we call “will of god” is actually our “essential being with its
potentialities, our nature declared as “very good” by God who created it.
NATURAL LAW AS THE ESSENTIAL NEED
TO BECOME A PERSON

Paul Tillich explains further that natural law is


the command to become what one potentially
is, a person within the community of person.
This command is the moral imperative.
Therefore, a moral act is not an act in obedience
to an external law, human or divine. It is the inner
law of our true being, of our essential or created
nature.

And an antimoral act is not the transgression of


one or several precisely circumscribed commands,
but an act that contradicts the self-realization of
the person as a person and drives towards
disintegration. (Paul Tillich)
Properties of the Natural Law

1. It is univeral. Natural law is constitutive


element of human nature. Therefore, it is true
wherever human nature manifest itself. All men
are precisely equal because of shared human
nature.
Properties of the Natural Law

3. It is recognizable. It is imprinted in the human


nature and man has the light of reason to know it.
The scholastic philosohers refered to this light of
reason as 'synderesis'. It enables man to recognize
self evident principles, such as: Do good and
avoid evil, honor your father and mother, be
honest etc.
Properties of the Natural Law

4. It is immutable or unchangeable. Natural law


is human nature. It is immutable because man's
essential nature can never be lost as long as man
is man. It may be blurd by malice or conditioned
by social pressure, but it cannot be destroyed
altogether.
Contents of Natural Law

1. Formal Norms - are those that relate to our


character, that is, to what kind of persons we ought
to be.
Example:
"Do good and avoid evil."
"Whatever you wish others to do to you, do so to
them."
"Be honest."
Contents of Natural Law

Formal Norms are absolute principles and


are unchangeable. What kind of person we
ought to become is not a relative and
subjective decision. Justice, Truth, and
Diligence are, for example absolute values.
Contents of Natural Law

2. Material Norms
- relate to the sorts of actions we ought to do.
- are the application of the formal norms to
individual concrete action, such as, his speech,
killing, making promises, or using contraceptives.
- they answer the question, "What should I do?"
Contents of Natural Law

Since material norms deal with concrete and


specific actions, they are not absolute.

Example:
What makes "killing" just or unjust depends on
a lot of factors.
Interpretating the Material Norms

How do we qpply the material norms in concrete


situations?
What determines whether an act is good or bad?

Theories of physicalism and personalism


answer these questions differently.
Interpretating the Material Norms

1. Physicalist - suggests that the physical and


biological nature of man determines morality.
Anything opposed to man's physical,
physiological, or biological tendencies is
wrong and immoral. (Gula: 35)
Interpretating the Material Norms

2. Personalist - suggests that reason is the


standard of morality. But what is reason?
According to the Thomistic School, reason is
recta ratio, or right reason.
The Order of Reason

Man participates in the Eternal Law in a way


proper to him as a human being. This participation
is through reason. St. Thomas Aquinas calls the
order established by reason as the specific
natural law.
The Order of Reason

Man has to consider the natural order of things. And


yet, he must not confuse the natural order with the
moral order.
Moral order is the harmony based on the dictates
of reason. It is the order established by man's
intellectual creativity, sharpened by observation,
research analysis, logic intuition and common
sense.
The Order of Reason

It is reason that which takes Natural Law and


interprets it in a way worthy of man's humanity. In
this sense, Natural Law is not the same as the
Laws of Nature which are the forces that govern
the material world.
The task of discocering and interpreting Natural
Law in a manner fitting to man belongs to moral
conscience.

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