El significado ‘político’ de la Ley en la filosofía de Marsilio de Padua

The paper explains the meaning of law and its political function in Marsilius of Padua’s philosophy. This thinker is interested, above all, in statehood and he points out that law is the ground of civitas (polis or political community). His emphasis on law means that the main question is what makes...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bernardo Bayona Aznar
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Universidad Complutense de Madrid 2005-01-01
Series:Anales del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía
Subjects:
Ley
Online Access:http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/ASHF/article/view/5553
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spelling doaj-62f9909e516e4407b948e41c42e2a1562020-11-25T03:36:05ZdeuUniversidad Complutense de MadridAnales del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía0211-23371988-25642005-01-01221251385544El significado ‘político’ de la Ley en la filosofía de Marsilio de PaduaBernardo Bayona AznarThe paper explains the meaning of law and its political function in Marsilius of Padua’s philosophy. This thinker is interested, above all, in statehood and he points out that law is the ground of civitas (polis or political community). His emphasis on law means that the main question is what makes law, law. It isn’t the content of justice, but the coercive command of the legislator, who has the authority to give law and to punish its transgression, because a law is a command whose disobedience leads to punishment. Therefore such definition of law runs into the question for the law-giver: it is “the whole corporation of citizens or its weightier part (valentior pars)”, that is to say, the rightful representation of the whole community, but never any other part of community, not even priests or doctors. The definition of law, which involves the unity of community and the sole legislator, is the philosophical ground to refute any political power for the Pope or priests to make laws.http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/ASHF/article/view/5553Filosofía medievalFilosofía políticaMarsilio de PaduaLeyLegisladorCivitas
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bernardo Bayona Aznar
spellingShingle Bernardo Bayona Aznar
El significado ‘político’ de la Ley en la filosofía de Marsilio de Padua
Anales del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía
Filosofía medieval
Filosofía política
Marsilio de Padua
Ley
Legislador
Civitas
author_facet Bernardo Bayona Aznar
author_sort Bernardo Bayona Aznar
title El significado ‘político’ de la Ley en la filosofía de Marsilio de Padua
title_short El significado ‘político’ de la Ley en la filosofía de Marsilio de Padua
title_full El significado ‘político’ de la Ley en la filosofía de Marsilio de Padua
title_fullStr El significado ‘político’ de la Ley en la filosofía de Marsilio de Padua
title_full_unstemmed El significado ‘político’ de la Ley en la filosofía de Marsilio de Padua
title_sort el significado ‘político’ de la ley en la filosofía de marsilio de padua
publisher Universidad Complutense de Madrid
series Anales del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía
issn 0211-2337
1988-2564
publishDate 2005-01-01
description The paper explains the meaning of law and its political function in Marsilius of Padua’s philosophy. This thinker is interested, above all, in statehood and he points out that law is the ground of civitas (polis or political community). His emphasis on law means that the main question is what makes law, law. It isn’t the content of justice, but the coercive command of the legislator, who has the authority to give law and to punish its transgression, because a law is a command whose disobedience leads to punishment. Therefore such definition of law runs into the question for the law-giver: it is “the whole corporation of citizens or its weightier part (valentior pars)”, that is to say, the rightful representation of the whole community, but never any other part of community, not even priests or doctors. The definition of law, which involves the unity of community and the sole legislator, is the philosophical ground to refute any political power for the Pope or priests to make laws.
topic Filosofía medieval
Filosofía política
Marsilio de Padua
Ley
Legislador
Civitas
url http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/ASHF/article/view/5553
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