‘Nature’ as a humanistic principle of universal communication? A European case study regarding natural law
Abstract
The conference, “Humankind at the Intersection of Nature and Culture”,
presented in the Kruger National Park in South Africa, forms part of the project
“Humanism in the era of globalisation: An intercultural dialogue on culture, humanity
and values”. This project works on the premise that there is a “need for a new kind of
humanism, the aim is to create an understanding of humankind in an era of globalisation
that encompasses all civilisations while at the same time emphasising their particularity
and diversity”.
Among the problems of an intercultural hermeneutics that have been in discussion,
and that we should regard as essential to the understanding of humanism demanded
here, there belongs the basic intuition that there needs to be universally valid norms
and values that are based upon mutual recognition of cultural diversity. In order
to establish such basic norms, humanism has to appeal to basic anthropological principles
that can make a claim to cross-cultural legitimacy. On the one hand, the justificatory
ground discerned in these principles must be unconditional and universalisable.
On the other hand, these basic anthropological principles have to be evident and intelligible
within each culture’s horizon of understanding. The determining ground of the
will, through which each human being can endorse this set of norms, has to be compatible
with his, or her, free consent.
Keywords: Norms, values, natural law, Stoa, Spanish scholasticism, Bartolomé