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Don Sturzo and the Ethical Value of Society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

To Most of the world, Don Luigi Sturzo is known, if at all, as an astute political thinker and as founder of the Popolare Party in Italy following the First World War. Sturzo's own political career began in 1905, when he was elected mayor of the Sicilian town of Caltagirone, in spite of the fact that he himself was a priest. As he attests, he was brought to engage actively in politics, then as well as in 1918, when founding the Popolare, because he saw that social action, which his own town in Sicily needed badly, was impotent without the necessary political action to aid in carrying out reform.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1965

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References

1 Sturzo, Luigi, “My Political Vocation,” Commonweal, XXXIV (09 26, 1941), 538Google Scholar.

2 For an excellent analysis of Sturzo's sociological thought, cf., Timasheff, Nicholas S., The Sociology of Luigi Sturzo (Baltimore, 1962)Google Scholar.

3 Sturzo, Luigi, Church and State (New York, 1939), p. 5Google Scholar.

4 Caponigri, A. Robert, “Don Luigi Sturzo,” Review of Politics, XIV (04, 1952), 153Google Scholar.

5 Sturzo, Luigi, The True Life (Washington, 1943), p. 19Google Scholar.

6 Sturzo, Luigi, “History and Philosophy,” Thought, XXI (03, 1946), 61Google Scholar.

7 Ibid., pp. 61–62.

8 Sturzo, Luigi, The Inner Laws of Society (New York, 1944), p. xxxGoogle Scholar.

9 Sturzo, , “History and Philosophy,” pp. 5556Google Scholar.

10 Ibid., p. 53.

11 Sturzo, Luigi, “The Philosophic Background of Christian Democracy,” Review of Politics, IX (01, 1947), 9Google Scholar.

12 The following analysis, unless otherwise indicated, follows Sturzo's thought as presented in his basic work, The Inner Laws of Society.

13 Sturzo, , The Inner Laws of Society, p. 3Google Scholar.

14 Sturzo, Luigi, The International Community and the Right of War (New York, 1930), p. 202Google Scholar. Such a “first principle” would be the knowledge that good was to be done and evil to be avoided, without an indication of what was good.

15 Sturzo, , The Inner Laws of Society, p. 161Google Scholar.

16 Sturzo, , The International Community and the Right of War, p. 144Google Scholar.

17 Sturzo, Luigi, “The Influence of Social Facts on Ethical Conceptions,” Thought, XX (03, 1945), 114Google Scholar.

18 Ibid., 116.

19 Sturzo, , The International Community and the Right of War, p. 147Google Scholar.

20 Sturzo, Luigi, Nationalism and Internationalism (New York, 1930), p. 22Google Scholar.

21 Sturzo, , The International Community and the Right of War, p. 208Google Scholar.

22 Sturzo, Luigi, “The Modern Conscience and the Right of War,” Hibbert Journal, XXV (07, 1927), 584Google Scholar.

23 Sturzo, , Church and State, p. 561Google Scholar.

24 Sturzo, , The International Community and the Right of War, pp. 4445Google Scholar.

25 Sturzo, , The Inner Laws of Society, p. 312Google Scholar.

26 Ibid., p. 313.

27 Sturzo, , The International Community and the Right of War, p. 50Google Scholar.