Voices of Enlightenment have long counseled modern men and women to flee authority, including authority claimed by the church. Aspiring to substitute rock-ribbed law for human, or even divine, authority, today's legal minds pursue a "rule of law, not of men." Any possibility of authority is almost everywhere assimilated to the threat of authoritarian abuse. Civilizing Authority counters the flight from authority with the claim that it is precisely authority itself that offers a barrier against authoritarianism. The book's authors share the insight that humans cannot increase, or even long survive, without authority, and they observe, from along a broad spectrum of perspectives, that all phases of our human living depend on authority. Families, churches, clubs, monasteries, unions, cities, and states — human living would be unrecognizable without them, and they all depend upon authority and authorities. Still, what is "the authority experience?" What are we obeying when when we give willing assent to authority? The ten authors of Civilizing Authority, Chrisitians of diverse belief and professional discipline, unite here to explore the ways in which authority, though elusive, remains possible — indeed, exigent — in a post-Christian world. Refusing to conflate genuine authority with positions of power or prestige, they probe the deep, and perhaps transendental, sources of authority. Friendship, solidarity, liberty, and perhaps even belief — these, the authors suggest, may be the true springs of the authority that is the principle of increase in human living.
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Explores the essential commonalities of authority across the spectrum of human living. This book also probes the risk that authoritarian abuse will arrive to compensate for the elusiveness of genuine authority in a post-Christian, materialist world.
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Part 1 Foreword Part 2 Introduction Part 3 Part I: The Spectrum of the Authority Experience Today Chapter 4 Authority and Reality Chapter 5 The Disappearance of Authority and the Elusiveness of Nonnatural Authority Chapter 6 Authority in the Church Part 7 Part II: Philosophies of Authority Chapter 8 Authority and Liberty Chapter 9 Does Authority Invite or Command? Chapter 10 A Rock on Which One Can Build: Friendship, Solidarity, and the Notion of Authority Chapter 11 Society, Subsidiarity, and Authority in Catholic Social Thought Part 12 Part III: Authority in Law? Chapter 13 How a Constitution May Undermine Constitutionalism Chapter 14 Locating Authority in Law Chapter 15 "Hollow Men?" Law and the Declension of Belief
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An education and a delight, Civilizing Authority is like participating in a rich and provocative conversation, about questions that are both timely and timeless, among learned friends.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780739118061
Publisert
2007-10-05
Utgiver
Vendor
Lexington Books
Vekt
513 gr
Høyde
239 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
252

Biographical note

Patrick McKinley Brennan is professor of law and John F. Scarpa Chair in Catholic legal studies at Villanova University.