File Download

There are no files associated with this item.

Supplementary

Article: The natural law ethics of public health lockdowns

TitleThe natural law ethics of public health lockdowns
Authors
Issue Date2022
PublisherUniversity of Notre Dame Law School.
Citation
Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy, 2022, v. 36, p. 101-124 How to Cite?
AbstractContemporary ethical reflections on responses to public health crises center on the deontological, utilitarian, and principlist traditions, but not the more ancient tradition of natural law. Yet, as an alternative to the usual framing of public health moral dilemmas as a conflict between individual liberty and collective interests, or trade-offs in the maximization of the greatest health of the greatest number, natural law ethics deserves a hearing for focusing on human fulfilment instantiated in the irreducible human goods. The irreducible goods such as life and health, friendship and community, excellence and satisfaction in work and play, knowledge of the truth, experience of the beauty, and practical reasonableness, each features its own domain for people to flourish in, distinct from and incommensurable with all the other goods. This Article is the first to bring this neoclassical natural law ethical framework to bear on the morality of public health lockdowns––a previously unthinkable, blunt, but consequential emergency measure that originated with the Chinese government’s initial response in January 2020 to Wuhan’s COVID-19 outbreak, but subsequently spread to all inhabited continents, putting billions of people under mandatory quarantine over prolonged periods. This Article affirms that public health lockdowns are not intrinsically immoral, insofar as they meet several conditions required by the fundamental precepts of natural law.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/316718

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorIp, CYE-
dc.date.accessioned2022-09-16T07:22:10Z-
dc.date.available2022-09-16T07:22:10Z-
dc.date.issued2022-
dc.identifier.citationNotre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy, 2022, v. 36, p. 101-124-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/316718-
dc.description.abstractContemporary ethical reflections on responses to public health crises center on the deontological, utilitarian, and principlist traditions, but not the more ancient tradition of natural law. Yet, as an alternative to the usual framing of public health moral dilemmas as a conflict between individual liberty and collective interests, or trade-offs in the maximization of the greatest health of the greatest number, natural law ethics deserves a hearing for focusing on human fulfilment instantiated in the irreducible human goods. The irreducible goods such as life and health, friendship and community, excellence and satisfaction in work and play, knowledge of the truth, experience of the beauty, and practical reasonableness, each features its own domain for people to flourish in, distinct from and incommensurable with all the other goods. This Article is the first to bring this neoclassical natural law ethical framework to bear on the morality of public health lockdowns––a previously unthinkable, blunt, but consequential emergency measure that originated with the Chinese government’s initial response in January 2020 to Wuhan’s COVID-19 outbreak, but subsequently spread to all inhabited continents, putting billions of people under mandatory quarantine over prolonged periods. This Article affirms that public health lockdowns are not intrinsically immoral, insofar as they meet several conditions required by the fundamental precepts of natural law.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.publisherUniversity of Notre Dame Law School. -
dc.relation.ispartofNotre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy-
dc.titleThe natural law ethics of public health lockdowns-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.identifier.emailIp, CYE: ericcip@hku.hk-
dc.identifier.authorityIp, CYE=rp02161-
dc.identifier.hkuros336550-
dc.identifier.volume36-
dc.identifier.spage101-
dc.identifier.epage124-
dc.publisher.placeUnited States-

Export via OAI-PMH Interface in XML Formats


OR


Export to Other Non-XML Formats