InMaking Men Moral, his 1995 book, George questioned the central doctrines of liberal jurisprudence and political theory. In his new work he extends his critique of liberalism, and also goes beyond it to show how contemporary natural law theory provides a superior way of thinking about basic problems of justice and political morality. Students as well as scholars in law, political science, and philosophy will find George's arguments stimulating, challenging, and compelling.
c Introduction Part 1 Theoretical Issues 1. A Defense of the New Natural Law Theory 2. Recent Criticism of Natural Law Theory 3. Natural Law and Human Nature 4. Does the Incommensurability Thesis Imperil Common Sense Moral Judgements? c 6 Free Choice, Practical Reason and Fitness for the Rule art 2 Moral and Political Questions 7. Religious Liberty and Political Morality 8. Marriage and the Liberal Imagination 9. What Sex Can Be: Alienation, Illusion, or One-Flesh Union 10 Making Children Moral: Pornography, Parents and the Public Interest. 11. Public Reason and Political Conflict: Abortion and Homosexual Acts 12. Natural Law and International Order Part 3 Dialectical Engagement 13. Moral Particularism, Thomism, and Traditions 14. Hu man Flourishing as a Criterion of Morality: A Critique of Percy's Naturalism 15. Nature, Morality and Homosexuality 16. Can Sex be Reasonable? 17. Moralistic Liberalism and Legal Moralism 18. Law, Democracy, and Moral Disagreement Index Introduction Part 1 Theoretical Issues 1. A Defense of the New Natural Law Theory 2. Recent Criticism of Natural Law Theory 3. Natural Law and Human Nature 4. Does the Incommensurability Thesis Imperil Common Sense Moral Judgements? 5 Natural Law and Positive Law 6 Free Choice, Practical Reason and Fitness for the Rule of Law