Bernd Franke, Trier: Das Prinzip naturrechtlicher Ethik bei John Locke
John Locke believes that moral values are not innate in human beings.
Quite the contrary, for him, whatever behaviour is consistent with the law is
to be defined as morally good. Only specific laws, however, qualify as
yardsticks for the evaluation of an act from an ethical perspective. Locke
assumes that there are three such groups of laws: divine laws, civil laws and
laws of opinion or reputation. This article sets out to scrutinize the
motivation of human action against the background of LockeÕs legal philosophy.
It then analyses how Locke deduces ethical principles. As Locke sees the
different groups of law as hierarchically ordered, it can be shown that natural
law influences ethics substantially. Thus, natural law becomes the pivotal
factor in LockeÕs ethical conception.
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