Papers Archives

Published on
23 October 2016

Christianity, Liberalism and the Market Economy

Introduction My subject this evening is “Christianity, Liberalism, and the Market Economy.” Many questions naturally arise in this discussion. Can a reasonably orthodox Christian, for example, support what is generally understood to be the market economy in preference to say, Keynesian or social democratic arrangements? Or does support for the market economy necessarily mean that […]

Read More

Published on
29 February 2012

Conscience, Authority and Conflict

1. Introduction A great deal of morality is concerned with the public arena: examining what is required for a just and fair society, and trying to map out the nature and extent of our obligations to our fellow citizens and to the wider world. The concepts of conscience, guilt and shame, by contrast, seem primarily […]

Read More

Published on
12 October 2011

Conscience and Values in the Response to Infectious Diseases

Two events tend to occur more or less regularly throughout history: wars and epidemics. Sometimes they occur separately and sometimes together. Both have caused and indeed continue to cause, devastating damage in terms of loss of life, physical and psychological suffering, famine, mass emigration and overall impoverishment of the affected populations. Although numbers do not […]

Read More

Published on
10 October 2011

‘Conscience’ as an aspect of ‘Religion’ Under the Religion Clauses of the United States’ Constitution: The Current State of the Question

Prof. William Wagner is professor of law and director of the Program of Studies in Jurisprudence at the Columbus School of Law, The Catholic University of America, where he is also Faculty Editor of the Journal of Law, Philosophy and Culture. He has a J.D. from Yale University Law School, and a Ph.D. in Moral […]

Read More

Published on
25 May 2011

Unravelling Values: Has Conscience Anything to Do with Aesthetic Taste?

That there is a relationship between morality and aesthetics is an idea which, at various times, writers and artists have been keen for one reason or another to assert. On the face of it there would seem to be a pleasing relationship between the two if we could say that the person most capable of […]

Read More

Published on
16 March 2011

New Forms of Sovereignty and the Right to Protect (R2P)

Any discussion of ‘new aspects of sovereignty’ makes it appropriate to start speaking of what the ‘old aspects of sovereignty’ imply and of what sovereignty traditionally means. We are dealing with a word derived from Latin, superus, which means what is above or higher; and ‘sovereignty’ thus points to ‘the top authority’. Before the rise of […]

Read More