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45 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Great Tome, But Not the Place to Start
George is an adroit, articulate, and erudite author, and this book is a well-crafted and intelligently-designed defense of modern natural law theory. Yet, these features still require the reader to be already familiar with ethics, meta-ethics, metaphysics, and natural law. This book is for graduate students and advanced undergraduates; it's not directed toward a general...
Published on April 6, 2002 by D. S. Heersink

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1 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Author mistakes convolution for insight
While the book does a reasonable job of tackling the subject matter, the author overuses compound sentences. Rather than clearly stating his points, the author loses his readers in a flurry of poorly constructed sentences and lists of names. I would recommend finding a more concise read with fewer unnecessary and repetitive words.
Published 18 months ago by Eamon K Doyle


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45 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Great Tome, But Not the Place to Start, April 6, 2002
This review is from: In Defense of Natural Law (Hardcover)
George is an adroit, articulate, and erudite author, and this book is a well-crafted and intelligently-designed defense of modern natural law theory. Yet, these features still require the reader to be already familiar with ethics, meta-ethics, metaphysics, and natural law. This book is for graduate students and advanced undergraduates; it's not directed toward a general readership. For a simpler, more straight-forward account cf, Finnis, "Natural Law and Natural Rights," (OUP, 1982).

George defends the neo-Thomistic view of natural law as refined by Messrs. Grisez, Finnis, and Boyle. This is not an uncontroversial stance. The core of the book is Chapter III, where the Grisez, Finnis, and Boyle version of natural law that George intends to defend is given. The book is rigorous and examines natural-law theory from variegated angles and various detractors, making close reading of dense argument necessary. The early chapters presuppose knowledge of natural law theory; thus, neophytes may profitably read Chapter III first. Chapter II is reserved for those already versed in natural law theory and want a examination of meta-ethics nuances.

I didn't like the way the naturalistic fallacy is handled (more "sidelined"), as if it is a minor point to a major premise. But George's defense of natural law theory avoids the fallacy (norms derived from facts) by using the Grisez, Finnis, and Boyle model, and succeeds in staying clear of metaphysical foundations. This caveat aside, I know of no better, one-volume, exhaustive, and sustained argument for natural law theory. It's dizzying reading, and even if inevitably unconvincing, generally worthwhile.

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1 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Author mistakes convolution for insight, August 24, 2010
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Eamon K Doyle (WELLESLEY HILLS, MA, US) - See all my reviews
This review is from: In Defense of Natural Law (Hardcover)
While the book does a reasonable job of tackling the subject matter, the author overuses compound sentences. Rather than clearly stating his points, the author loses his readers in a flurry of poorly constructed sentences and lists of names. I would recommend finding a more concise read with fewer unnecessary and repetitive words.
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1 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Oxford, Schmoxford, December 19, 2010
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A few decades from now, mark my words and prescience, people will marvel that books like this got published by tony outlets like Oxford University. No doubt they will trace a predictable trail of influential backers and ultra-conservative politicos who smoothed the way for a very wan intellectual like Robert George. He has a veneer, and when I first read a few things, there was a moment of being impressed. But then came another moment of pure intellectual reflection, and even on its own terms, by any contemporary standard, his words seemed vastly unsupported. I mean how many times, and in how many ways can you make the same point that there is a religious substratum that has been forgotten. And lo, and behold, Mr. George is here to lay it bare for us all. Robby One-Note is not the half of it. It is a terrific pretense. But what is more interesting culturally is that it all was predicated ironically on the basic demise of culture. Were our culture still strong, and critical thinking still vigorous, Robert George's whole trajectory would never have happened. But in the sloppy thinking of our day, his prissy little animadversions, polishing the Natural Law nugget like a piece of costume jewelry, got ahead. He would do well to keep with his nonsense. He knows where his bread is buttered, and that is what he will do. Because I don't believe anyone is going to be willing to cut him and his followers one bit of slack even if they come to some sense of sanity and decency. They should circle their wagons, because they are beyond the point of return. Ubi solitudinem faciunt pacem appellant.
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In Defense of Natural Law
In Defense of Natural Law by Robert P. George (Hardcover - April 22, 1999)
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