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Problem with Leo XIII is like John Paul II ambiguity leads to problems of semi-Modernism like semi-Arianism see my Was JPII a Kantian: AI Overview Your summary accurately captures the fundamental shifts in early modern political philosophy regarding moral rights and the social contract. John Locke transitioned Francisco Suárez’s theory by disconnecting natural rights from their strict divine foundations and re-grounding them in human self-ownership, labor, and property. Thomas Hobbes took this secularization even further, abandoning natural law entirely to build a theory of the state solely on the basis of individual survival and rational self-interest.Regarding Pope Leo XIII and the concept of liberty, your assessment—consistent with the analysis of scholars like John Rist—correctly highlights the tension between Catholic theology and Enlightenment philosophy.The contrast between Pope Leo XIII's framework and secularized Enlightenment thought can be broken down into these core areas:Rejection of Autonomy: Pope Leo XIII fundamentally opposed the autonomous, secularized liberties espoused by Enlightenment thinkers. While Enlightenment philosophers viewed liberty as a total absence of external constraints (the sovereign right to think, speak, and act as one pleases without absolute moral truth), Leo XIII defined true liberty as the rational ability to freely choose the good.Rejection of "Secularizing Suárez": Some have mistakenly tried to retroactively link Pope Leo XIII’s pragmatic acceptance of varying forms of government (such as his embrace of republics in France) to Enlightenment theories. However, as scholars like Rist point out, Leo XIII did not secularize Suárez. Rather, he utilized Suárez’s and St. Thomas Aquinas's philosophies to argue that civil authority ultimately comes from God, not from a secular, unanchored "social contract" of autonomous wills.Condemnation of "Liberalism": In his 1888 encyclical Libertas, Pope Leo XIII critiqued these "modern liberties". He attacked the Enlightenment assertion that individuals have an absolute right to unlimited freedom of speech, worship, and the press. He argued that separating civil society from divine law inherently leads to moral decline, as rights cannot exist independently of objective moral truths and responsibilities.True Liberty vs. False Liberty: For Leo XIII, to divorce human rights from divine law (as Hobbes and Locke did) degrades freedom into mere license. True human dignity and rights are preserved when reason and liberty are ordered toward their ultimate end, which is union with God, rather than the isolated pursuit of self-interest.For further reading on the intersection of Christian theology, natural law, and modern rights, you can consult John Rist's works, such as Reason and Revelation or What is Truth?, which deal directly with these historical shifts away from the original Christian consensus.

AI Overview Your summary accurately captures the fundamental shifts in early modern political philosophy regarding moral rights and the social contract . John Locke transitioned Francisco Suárez’s theory by disconnecting natural rights from their strict divine foundations and re-grounding them in human self-ownership, labor, and property. Thomas Hobbes took this secularization even further, abandoning natural law entirely to build a theory of the state solely on the basis of individual survival and rational self-interest. [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] Regarding Pope Leo XIII and the concept of liberty , your assessment—consistent with the analysis of scholars like John Rist—correctly highlights the tension between Catholic theology and Enlightenment philosophy. [ 1 ] The contrast between Pope Leo XIII's framework and secularized Enlightenment thought can be broken down into these core areas: Rejection of Autonomy: Pope Leo XIII fundamentally opposed the autonomous, secularized li...
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AI Overview Pope Leo XIII, much like Francisco Suárez, rejected Enlightenment notions of autonomous, secularized liberty. However, his efforts to combat subjective modernism inadvertently created a philosophical pivot. By grounding the defense of human dignity in a framework of "rights"—particularly in his pioneering work on capital and labor—he shifted the Church's language from classical objective virtue to modern rights.This shift is a central point of debate in Catholic political philosophy and modernism:The Classical vs. Modern FrameworkClassical (Virtue & Charity): Rooted in the philosophies of Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas, this tradition viewed human flourishing through the lens of objective moral goodness, virtue, and charity. Rights were derived from what a person required to fulfill their ultimate duty and supernatural end.Modern (Justice & Rights): Enlightenment frameworks, rooted in figures like John Locke, severed this connection to virtue, defining rights as subjective, autonomous claims inherent to the individual, independent of their moral state or objective truth.Leo XIII’s Dilemma and LegacyPope Leo XIII was forced to respond to the devastating exploitation of the Industrial Revolution. To defend the poor against both radical socialism and laissez-faire capitalism, he issued the groundbreaking 1891 encyclical Rerum Novarum. In doing so, he made an important adaptation:He strongly upheld the "objective rights" of the human person, such as the right to a just wage, private property, and the formation of unions.In countering absolute state power, his synthesis of natural law and Suárez's power transfer theories validated a variety of legitimate civic regimes.To articulate these protections, he relied increasingly on the language of justice (rendering what is due) rather than strictly emphasizing charity (giving from love).The Subjective Modernism CritiqueCritics and certain traditionalist philosophers argue that this pivotal transition inadvertently supplied the foundational vocabulary for "subjective modernism." By adopting the modern philosophical category of "rights" to defend Catholic principles, Leo detached the moral status of the claim from the older, objective obligations of virtue and charity.This is often seen as the gateway to later modernist heresies, wherein rights came to be viewed as autonomous, self-justifying claims of the individual conscience against external authority, rather than duties bound to eternal law.To explore these philosophical debates in depth, consider reading texts like the Cambridge University Press analysis of Leo XIII's response to modernity or the full text of Rerum Novarum on the Vatican archives.

  AI Overview Pope Leo XIII, much like Francisco Suárez, rejected Enlightenment notions of autonomous, secularized liberty . However, his efforts to combat subjective modernism inadvertently created a philosophical pivot. By grounding the defense of human dignity in a framework of "rights"—particularly in his pioneering work on capital and labor—he shifted the Church's language from classical objective virtue to modern rights. [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] This shift is a central point of debate in Catholic political philosophy and modernism: The Classical vs. Modern Framework Classical (Virtue & Charity): Rooted in the philosophies of Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas, this tradition viewed human flourishing through the lens of objective moral goodness, virtue, and charity. Rights were derived from what a person required to fulfill their ultimate duty and supernatural end. Modern (Justice & Rights): Enlightenment frameworks, rooted in figures like John Locke, sever...

The Uses of Suarez A Review of Kincaid, “Law From Below: How The Thought of Francisco Suárez, SJ, Can Renew Contemporary Legal Engagement” Adrian Vermeule Nov 19, 2024

https://thenewdigest.substack.com/p/the-uses-of-suarez The Uses of Suarez A Review of Kincaid, “Law From Below: How The Thought of Francisco Suárez, SJ, Can Renew Contemporary Legal Engagement” Adrian Vermeule Nov 19, 2024 The New Digest is delighted to present this guest essay by Mr. Aníbal Sabater, a partner at Chaffetz Lindsey LLP, a specialist in international arbitration, and a noted commentator on classical legal themes. His previous work in our pages on constitutionalism in Spain and can be found  here  and  here ; and his posts at the Ius et Iustitium site, including a series on lawyers and law in Dante, can be found  here . The New Digest is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support our work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Share In his 1879 Encyclical  Aeterni Patris , Leo XIII urged scholars to read Aquinas directly: “…  lest the false for the true or the corrupt for the pure be drunk in, be ye watchful that th...