|
St. Augustine's Press |
The Catholic Church today finds herself at the very center of some of the most important
and controversial moral and social developments of our day, including abortion, capital
punishment, cloning, so-called “gay marriage,” pacifism and the morality of war, the
ethics of healthcare in a technologically advanced but morally deficient society, and
other related subjects. The Fellowship of Catholic Scholars attempts to address issues
such as these by inviting the best and most knowledgeable scholars and commentators
to speak at its annual conventions. This book brings together the addresses and responses
devoted to these topics at the Fellowship's 26th annual convention in 2003. The contributors
include the renowned John Finnis of Oxford and Notre Dame, Mary Eberstadt
of the Hoover Institution, Christopher Wolfe of Marquette University, William E. May of
the John Paul II Institute, Gerard V. Bradley of the Notre Dame Law School, Patrick Lee
of Franciscan University, Steven A. Long of the University of St. Thomas, E. Christian
Brugger of Loyola University in New Orleans, J. Brian Benestad of the University of Scranton, the Rev. Michael J. Baxter of Notre Dame, and, not least, the well-known moral |
||||
|
|
|||||
|
The Catholic Citizen |