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Are Unjust Laws Really Laws? Positivism and the Natural Law Tradition

  • Ronk Lecture Hall 340 Samaritan Avenue Ashland, OH, 44805 United States (map)

Ashland University

The Thomistic Institute at Ashland University a lecture by Prof. Peter Koritansky of the University of Prince Edward Island titled “Are Unjust Laws Really Laws? Positivism and the Natural Law Tradition.”

Friday, Feb. 11

Ronk Lecture Hall

4:00 PM

This lecture is free and open to the public.


About the Speaker:

Peter Karl Koritansky is a Professor of History, Philosophy, and Religious Studies at The University of Prince Edward Island in Charlottetown, Canada. At UPEI, he teaches courses in ancient and medieval philosophy, moral and political philosophy, philosophy of law and Catholic thought. He has also taught at Malone University (Canton, OH), Walsh University (North Canton, OH), the Ateneo Pontificio Regina Apostolorum (Rome) and has been a visiting scholar at The University of Notre Dame. Dr. Koritansky received his Ph.D in philosophy from The University of Toronto and is the author of Thomas Aquinas and the Philosophy of Punishment (CUA Press, 2012) and Engaging the Skeptic: Essays Addressing the Modern Secularist’s Most Serious Objections to the Catholic Worldview (Justin Press, 2018). He has also recently published “Thomas Aquinas and the Euthyphro Dilemma” (Heythrop Journal, 2018) and “Retributive Justice and Natural Law” (The Thomist, 2019). For the 2021-22 academic year, Dr. Koritansky is a John and Daria Barry Visiting Research Scholar at Princeton University with the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions. He is currently completing a manuscript tentatively entitled "An Introduction to Thomistic Natural Law."

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How and How Not to be Happy

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February 11

Aristotle and the Quantum Revolution: How Modern Science Vindicates Ancient Philosophy of Nature