A PHILOSOPHICAL INQUIRY INTO THE RELATIONSHIP OF JUSTICE AND LOVE TO CIVIL SOCIETY IN THE POLITICAL THOUGHT OF ST. AUGUSTINE

Stephen Chijioke Chukwujekwu, Eugene Chukwueloka Anowai

Abstract


Nigeria, like many underdeveloped countries of Africa, is undergoing many social and political problems such as corruption, insurgency, terrorism, armed banditry, electoral frauds, examination malpractices, sexual abuses, etc. These problems are largely rooted in ethical behaviors of citizens in civil society. This paper critically interrogated the unethical foundations of the society based on Saint Augustine’s treatise on justice and love and their relationship to civil society. Augustine rejected Cicero’s idea of “highest justice†(summa justitia) and rather thinks that a “true justice†(vera justitia) in relationship to government is what “a people†(a republic) must recognize in order to be well governed. Later, he redefined “a people†in terms of being bound together by “the objects of their love,†not by true justice. The question before us in this paper is whether Augustine meant to undermine justice? Or, did he really separate justice from love? With analytical method, we found that Augustine, led by philosophy (reason) illuminated by faith, made the point that we fully understand civil society only when we understand its loves and hates. These give a better clue to its character than its constitution or systems of justice or formal declarations. Our conclusion is that, following Augustine, human realities are seen in a new light in civil society in terms of love, because God is love. Applied to humans, his insight shows that citizens in civil society are what they love.

Full Text:

PDF

References


Arendt, Hannah. Love and Saint Augustine. Edited and with an Interpretive

Essay by Joanna Veechiarelli Scott and Judith Chelius Stark. The

University of Chicago Press, 1996.

Aristotle. “Nicomachean Ethics, Book V. Ch. 1.†In Introduction to Aristotle.

Edited with Introductions, by Richard McKeon. The Modern Library,

, pp. 327-579.

Armstrong, A. H. An Introduction to Ancient Philosophy. Methuen & Co. Ltd,

Augustine. City of God [De Civitate Dei, DCD].Transl. by Marcus Dods.

Random House, 1950.

_ _ _. The City of God. Transl. by Gerald C. Walsh & Co. Image Books, 1958.

_ _ _. The Confessions. Transl. by R.S. Pine-Coffin. Penguin Books, 1961.

_ _ _. The Confessions. Transl. by William Watts (in Two Volumes).

University Press, 1912.

Brown, P. Religion and Society in the Age of St. Augustine. Harper & Row,

Dean, Herbert. The Political and Social Ideas of St. Augustine. Columbia

University Press, 1963.

Gilson, Etienne. The Christian Philosophy of Saint Augustine. Transl. by L. E.

M., Lynch. Victor Gollanez, 1961.

Graham, Gordon. Contemporary Social Philosophy. Basil Blackwell, 1988.

Markus, R. A. Saeculum: History and Society in the Theology of St.

Augustine. Cambridge University Press, 1970.

Martin, R. “Two Cities in Augustine’s Political Philosophy.†Journal of the

History of Ideas, vol. 33, April 1977, pp. 195-216.

Mattox, J. Mark. “Augustine: Political and Social Philosophyâ€

http:www.iep.utm.edu/wp.content.media/augustine.jpg

Paoluch, H. The Political Writings of St. Augustine. Gateway, 1962.

Parel, Anthony J. “Justice and Love in the Political Thought of St.

Augustine.†In Hugo A. Meynell, ed. Grace, Politics and Desire: Essay on

Augustine. University of Calgary Press, 1990, pp. 71-84.

Wallace, William A. The Elements of Philosophy – A Compendium for

Philosophers and Theologians. Alba House, 1977.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.