La filosofía de la coacción en el medievo
Main Article Content
Abstract
Christian philosophical tradition, medieval in a large sense, recieves from greek philosophy a positive valuation of coaction as auxiliary instrument of morality. Saint Augustine reinforces it by his reference to "libido" and to original sin. Saint Thomas consideres "providential" the whole punitive dimension of state. Marsilius of Padova converts coaction into the essence of law. Suarez concieves law as (non democratical) "imposition" of superior's will. The two authors seem defenseless against the modern phenomenon of "power centralization".
Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
Publication Facts
Metric
This article
Other articles
Peer reviewers
0
2.4
Reviewer profiles N/A
Author statements
Author statements
This article
Other articles
Data availability
N/A
16%
External funding
N/A
32%
Competing interests
N/A
11%
Metric
This journal
Other journals
Articles accepted
12%
33%
Days to publication
6563
145
Indexed in
-
—
- Academic society
- N/A
- Publisher
- UCOPress
Article Details
How to Cite
MONCHO PASCUAL, J. (1999). La filosofía de la coacción en el medievo. Revista Española De Filosofía Medieval, 6, 259–273. https://doi.org/10.21071/refime.v6i.9673
Issue
Section
ARTICLES