moral right and state authority in early modern political thought /
edited by Ian Hunter and David Saunders.
New York :
Palgrave,
2002.
xii, 257 pages ;
23 cm
Includes bibliographical references (pages 248-251) and index.
The rule of the state and natural law / Blandine Kriegel -- The moral conservatism of natural rights / Knud Haakonssen -- Pufendorf's Doctrine of Sovereignty and its natural law foundations / Thomas Behme -- Natura naturans: natural law and the sovereign in the writings of Thomas Hobbes / Conal Condren -- Probability, punishments and property: Richard Cumberland's sceptical science of sovereignty / Jon Parkin -- The prince and the church in the thought of Christian Thomasius / Thomas Ahnert -- Civil sovereigns and the king of kings: Barbeyrac on the creator's right to rule / Petter Korkman -- Sovereignty and resistance: the development of the right of resistance in German natural law / Frank Grunert -- From the virtue of justice to the concept of legal order: the significance of the suum cuique tribuere in Hobbes' political philosophy / Dieter Hüning -- Natural law and the construction of political sovereignty in Scotland, 1660-1690 / Clare Jackson -- Self-defense in statutory and natural law: the reception of German political thought in Britain / Robert von Friedeburg -- Hobbes and Pufendorf on natural equality and civil sovereignty / Kari Saastamoinen -- natural law, sovereignty and international law: a comparative perspective / Peter Schröder -- Property, territory and sovereignty: justifying political boundaries / Duncan Ivison -- Pufendorf and the politics of recognition / Michael J. Seidler.
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"Early modern natural law theorists were confronted by a single crucial problem: how to provide a new, secular legitimacy for civil authority under circumstances in which confessional conflict had rendered the standard religious justifications inoperable or suspect. In Natural Law and Civil Sovereignty fifteen leading historians of political thought provide fresh accounts of how early modern writers rose to this challenge. In addition to offering novel treatments of figures well known to English readers (Grotius, Hobbes, Locke, Cumberland), the chapters also reveal the crucial role played by lesser-known writers (Althusius, Pufendorf, Thomasius, Barbeyrac, Burlarnaqui), paying particular attention to the circumstance their doctrines were intended to address and to the milieux in which they were disseminated, in the context of today's fears and hopes for the demise of the sovereign state, this book provides a series of timely insights into the early modern struggle that gave birth to the modern concept of sovereignty - the struggle to legitimate a desacralised political order."--BOOK JACKET.