A Summary of John Finnis
A Summary of John Finnis
A Summary of John Finnis
John Finnis
John Finnis is an Australian legal scholar who grew up in Adelaide before getting a
Rhodes scholarship to Oxford. He is currently professor of law at Oxford. Finnis
published Natural Law and Natural Rights in 1980, and the book is considered a
seminal restatement of the natural law doctrine. Finnis is a practising catholic, and a
fair proportion of his work (in NLNR and subsequent articles) deals with the
relationship between natural law and Christian/Catholic values.
The Seven Basic Goods
The central object of Finnis’s theory is a set of seven fundamental ‘goods’ for
humankind. These goods are:
Life
Knowledge (for its own sake)
Friendship and Sociability
Play (for its own sake)
Aesthetic Experience
Practical Reasonableness, i.e. the ability to reason correctly about what is best for
yourself, and to act on those decisions.
Religion i.e. a connection with, and participation with, the orders that transcend
individual humanity
The basic goods serve as an explanation of why we do things. Any worthwhile activity
is worth doing because it participates in one or more basic goods.
Other positive qualities, like freedom or humility, are merely methods by which we can
achieve one or more of the basic goods. Other motivations for action, such as the
pursuit of pleasure or material gain, are misguided and motivated by human
inclination rather than practical reason.
4. You should make sure that you do not become obsessed with a particular project,
and keep the perspective that the project is a participation of a basic good.
5. You should actually do projects and make an effort to improve – don’t just sit
around or repeat old habits
6. You should calculate and plan your actions so that they are the most efficient (in a
utilitarian sense) and do the most good.
7. You should never commit an act that directly harms a basic good, even if it will
indirectly benefit a different basic good. For example, you should not kill even if it
will indirectly save more lives later.
8. You should foster the common good of the community.
9. You should act according to your conscience and practical reason, not the
authority of someone else.
Making Decisions using the Seven Goods and the Nine Requirements
The seven goods and the nine requirements apply equally to everyone. To make
specific decisions in your life, you think reasonably, in accordance with the nine
requirements, and decide how you will participate in the basic goods.
There is plenty of scope for discretion in this scheme. If you are deciding what to do
with your day, you could choose to listen to music, or to go hiking, or to go to a party,
or to volunteer for disaster relief. These are all, in principle, valid choices. Some
choices arewrong, e.g. murdering someone, or spending all day in an empty room
doing nothing, but there are many equally correct choices.
The seven goods are all equally fundamental, and do not exist in a hierarchy.
Therefore, although some acts are wrong (because they do not participate in a basic
good), there is no single correct act. This is an important distinction between
theoretical and practical reason: in theoretical reason, if two statements contradict
then at least one of them must be false. In practical reason, there can be two
contradictory acts that are both morally correct choices. It is up to a human’s free will
to choose which act they will adopt.
In this way, the seven goods and the nine requirements specify the overarching
structure and goals, but do not determine the minutiae of day-to-day life, or even big
decisions like the choice of career.
The Common Good and the Need for Authority
Humans naturally need to live in groups. This is both required expressly by the basic
good of Sociability, and implicitly by all the other goods, because we are most
productive when we are working together. Hence, one of the nine requirements of
practical reason is ‘Contribute to the common good.’
The common good is the situation where each member of the community can
effectively pursue the basic goods for themselves. Like one of the basic goods, the
common good is never achieved, it is only participated in.
Authority
To best achieve the common good, certain acts need to be performed by
the wholecommunity rather than specific people. Examples are respect for the rules of
games, collaboration within knowledge, spirituality within the community, or respect
for each other’s lives and safety. Such co
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One of the basic goods is practical reasonableness. It is necessary that every member
of a society be able to make decisions for themselves. Authority figures therefore need
to compromise between coordinating society effectively, and granting people the
ability to pursue their own ends in the manner they choose.
Natural Law
One of the strongest and most effective sources of authority is the law, and therefore,
Finnis concludes, law is a morally necessary component of society.
There is another consideration that can sometimes provide a moral obligation to obey
immoral laws. Imagine that an act X is morally wrong, but is required by law. Since
the law has moral force, it is morally important to ensure that the law is stable.
Therefore citizens have a moral obligation to perform X for the sake of not
undermining the legal system, and legal officials have a moral obligation enforce X for
the same reason. This moral obligation will not necessarily trump the moral obligation
that X not be performed, but it is possible that it will trump that obligation. In this
way, it can sometimes be morally correct to obey the law, even if the law itself is not
morally valid.
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The Diagram
So where does Finnis’s account of law fit into the diagram? We have already seen that
the basic goods and the requirements of practical reason exist in reality. However, the
specific laws of a society do not exist in reality – they are not specified by the general
nature of the basic goods and requirements. However, the goods and requirements
grant laws moral validity, and this validity is objective. If we accept Kelsen’s premise
that laws are normative statements (Finnis doesn’t go into this, but it clears things up),
then natural laws are a set of correct normative statements. This gives us:
Source: Finnis, J. (2011, first published 1980). Natural law and natural rights.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.