If they were recognized and enforceable within a particular legal system then they would be limited by jurisdiction. Natural rights are supposed to be universal, but there is no universal legal system. In any case, natural rights are supposed to precede and transcend legal systems. — NOS4A2
Such is the case with legal rights as well. Someone believes they should have a legal right to do X. Rather than appeal to nature, though, they appeal to those in power. The difference is that legislation is designed to let one man or group of men arbitrarily dictate to all other men what they may or may not do, not unlike slavery, which is contrary to natural law. — NOS4A2
What does it mean to be in accord with or contrary to nature? What this meant for the ancients, and for the philosophers of Liberalism, and contemporary thinkers is not the same. — Fooloso4
So a woman is raped in a nation where the positive law permits it because she is the possession of the man who has committed this act.
Was this "act" a violation? If it was a violation, what was it a violation of? — Hanover
So a woman is raped in a nation where the positive law permits it because she is the possession of the man who has committed this act.
Was this "act" a violation? If it was a violation, what was it a violation of? — Hanover
The law in effect wasn't violated, clearly. But no non-legal right must be violated in order for an act to be immoral. The rape was reprehensible regardless of any right or law. — Ciceronianus
If we changed the word "law" in #3 to "rules" or "theory" we'd have no disagreement. The quibble is over the term "law."
Is this a correct summation? — Hanover
I think so. It seems I'm a legal positivist. I think the use of the words "law" and "rights" result in confusion, and the law is distinct from morality. I favor legal rights as I think they serve to put limits on governmental power. But rights which aren't legal rights are what people think should be legal rights if they're not already.
I favor virtue ethics and other ethics which aren't based on concepts of individual rights. People claim so many rights.
The idea that nature or God confers rights is untenable. Only men confer rights. — NOS4A2
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