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Legal, Ecclesiological, and Economic Perspectives on the Notion of Family and Its Role in the Development of Society and the State

Daniel Burtic ()
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Daniel Burtic: Emanuel University of Oradea

Chapter Chapter 21 in Reimagining Capitalism in a Post-Globalization World, 2024, pp 309-317 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract The family was counted as the “basic cell” of the church, the state, and society. The rules and rules that govern it also came from the three directions. On the one hand, the state has tried to protect and regulate the rights and obligations that the family has. On the other hand, the church has never forgotten that the family was the first institution created by God. The idea that we are trying to detach in this work is that the family and the state develop when they fulfill “the norms of divine law that are immutable being located in the Holy Revelation.” The evolution and modernization of the family are carried out simultaneously with the evolution and modernization of the state. On the same logic, it seems that the decline of one of the two actors can also lead to the decline of the other. We wonder if today we have any of the two subjects of the “family and the state” in decline, and how is the future predicted? We also wonder if the two subjects still respect the rules of divine law and whether this has an influence on the future?

Keywords: Rights and obligations; The family and the state; Divine law and human law (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:prbchp:978-3-031-59858-6_21

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-59858-6_21

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