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Index
Acknowledgments
Part 1 Virtue, Law, and the Problem of the Common Good
Why Aquinas? Reconsidering and Reconceiving the Common Good
The Promise and Problem of the Common Good: Contemporary Experience and Classical Articulation
Why Aquinas? Centrality of the Concept and Focus on Foundations
An Overview of the Argument by Parts and Chapters
Contemporary Responses to the Problem of the Common Good: Three Anglo-American Theories
Liberal Deontologism: Contractarian Common Goods in Rawls’s Theory of Justice
Communitarianism or Civic Republicanism: Sandel against Commonsense “Otherness”
A Third Way? Galston on the Common Goods of Liberal Pluralism
Part 2 Aquinas’s Social and Civic Foundations
Unearthing and Appropriating Aristotle’s Foundations: From Three Anglo-American Theorists Back to Thomas Aquinas
Aristotelianism and Political-Philosophic Foundations, Old and New
Aristotle’s Three Political-Philosophic Foundations in Thomas Aquinas’s Thought
The First Foundation and Aquinas’s Commentary : Human Nature as “Political and Social” in Politics I
Reinforcing the Foundations: Aquinas on the Problem of Political Virtue and Regime-Centered Political Science
The Second Foundation and Aquinas’s Commentary : Human Beings and Citizens in Politics Ⅲ
Faults in the Foundations: The Uncommented Politics and the Problem of Regime Particularity
Politics Pointing beyond the Polis and the Politeia : Aquinas’s New Foundations
Finishing the Foundations and Beginning to Build: Aquinas on Human Action and Excellence as Social, Civic, and Religious
Community, Common Good, and Goodness of Will
Natural Sociability and the Extension of the Human Act
Cardinal Virtues as Social and Civic Virtues – with a Divine Exemplar
Part 3 Moral Virtues at the Nexus of Personal and Common Goods
Remodeling the Moral Edifice (I): Aquinas and Aristotelian Magnanimity
Aristotle on Magnanimity as Virtue
Aquinas’s Commentary on the Magnanimity of the Nicomachean Ethics
The Summa Theologiae on Magnanimity and Some “Virtues of Acknowledged Dependence”
Remodeling the Moral Edifice (Ⅱ): Aquinas and Aristotelian Legal Justice
Aristotle on Legal Justice
Aquinas’s Commentary on Legal Justice in the Nicomachean Ethics
Legal Justice and Natural Law in the Summa Theologiae
Part 4 Politics, Human Law, and Transpolitical Virtue
Aquinas’s Two Pedagogies: Human Law and the Good of Moral Virtue
Aquinas’s Negative Narrative, or How Law Can Curb Moral Vice
Beyond Reform School: Law’s Positive Pedagogy According to Aquinas
Universality and Particularity, Law and Liberty
Thomistic Legal Pedagogy and Liberal-Democratic Polities
Theological Virtue and Thomistic Political Theory
The Problematic Political Promotion of Theological Virtue
Infused Moral Virtue and Civic Legal Justice
Thomistic and Aristotelian Moderation for the Common Good
Works Cited
Index
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