By adopting Aristotelian doctrines, reviewed in the light of Hellenistic philosophies, Cicero developed a legal and political thought quite suitable to Rome. I will examine some tenets showing the very Roman purpose, no less than the Greek roots, of Cicero’s philosophy of law: natural law as right reason; law as the keystone of political community; public interest as the raison d’etre of law. This way of arguing about the law, emphasizing its institutional dimensions, proves to be, in the crisis years of the Roman Republic, a flawless example of legal philosophy as a reflection deeply situated in its own historical and social context.
(2021). Ad rei publicae utilitatem. Prospettive ciceroniane su lex e ius [journal article - articolo]. In RIVISTA DI FILOSOFIA DEL DIRITTO. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10446/264649
Ad rei publicae utilitatem. Prospettive ciceroniane su lex e ius
Zanichelli, Maria
2021-01-01
Abstract
By adopting Aristotelian doctrines, reviewed in the light of Hellenistic philosophies, Cicero developed a legal and political thought quite suitable to Rome. I will examine some tenets showing the very Roman purpose, no less than the Greek roots, of Cicero’s philosophy of law: natural law as right reason; law as the keystone of political community; public interest as the raison d’etre of law. This way of arguing about the law, emphasizing its institutional dimensions, proves to be, in the crisis years of the Roman Republic, a flawless example of legal philosophy as a reflection deeply situated in its own historical and social context.File | Dimensione del file | Formato | |
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