Rights, schmights.
The only rights worth speaking of are legal rights; that is to say, those are the only rights which matter, as they are (generally) recognized and may be enforced. We may claim we have rights of all kinds, of course, and ascribe them to God or Nature--for all the good it will do us--but unless they're recognized in the law we're merely expressing our self-regard.
Rights in the law serve the purpose of restricting the government and others from restricting us from doing, saying or thinking what we wish, or at least discouraging them from doing so and making them subject to penalty in that event. It's not clear to me that a conception of something along the lines of inalienable rights granted us in some obscure manner by a creator or inherent in the universe is needed to serve such a purpose, however.
Ah well, thought I'd make a statement. — Ciceronianus the White
I'm not sure what you mean. There certainly are non-legal rules, i.e. rules of conduct which are generally observed without being law, but I don't think they're necessarily founded on the concept of "rights."Although I agree with the general idea, I think you're forgetting non-legal rules that are recognised and enforced, e.g. employment, family, religion, etc — Michael
But can't there be an unjust government and unjust laws? If so, it seems the government and laws are being judged by a higher authority. — Hanover
I don't think we need a notion of non-legal rights in order to maintain that governments and laws are bad. — Ciceronianus the White
I personally find it difficult to maintain that God says I--or anyone else for that matter--should be allowed to do, etc., something, — Ciceronianus the White
I'm not sure what you mean. There certainly are non-legal rules, i.e. rules of conduct which are generally observed without being law, but I don't think they're necessarily founded on the concept of "rights." — Ciceronianus the White
But can't there be an unjust government and unjust laws? If so, it seems the government and laws are being judged by a higher authority. — Hanover
I'm not suggesting that God is necessary to be moral, but removal of some higher authority from the equation does make it difficult to explain why your moral beliefs are more correct than another's. — Hanover
Non-legal rights are just another way of saying what morality requires, but I don't see the quibble over whether to call them "rights" or not is significant. We typically speak in terms of our moral duties to others, which would imply the other person has a certain right to be treated a particular way, and none of that implicates law. — Hanover
Such is the quandary of the non-religious in offering a foundation for morality in every instance. I'm not suggesting that God is necessary to be moral, but removal of some higher authority from the equation does make it difficult to explain why your moral beliefs are more correct than another's. — Hanover
I think it's more appropriate to say we should or should not treat another person a certain way, rather than he/she has a "right" to be treated or not treated in a certain way. To say we have "rights" which are unenforceable, and may be flaunted at will--which are not, in other words, legal rights--makes little sense to me. — Ciceronianus the White
If everyone can pursue happiness, Locke reasoned, then more people act for the greater good, resulting in betterment of society. That is the objective of positive law. It is not ‘positive law’ because rights are entitlements, rather than restrictions. It is positive law because its objective is to enable good....
....In practical applications, the correct approach is thus not "what rights do I have which the government may not take away?" That would be viewing rights as entitlements. The correct question is: "what authority must the government have to maximize everyone's rights?" That results in the greatest amount of life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness; and hence the greatest prosperity and well being of all.
I think it's more appropriate to say we should or should not treat another person a certain way, rather than he/she has a "right" to be treated or not treated in a certain way. — Ciceronianus the White
If it isn't a quandary, what right do the women in Saudi Arabia (for example) have to be treated equal to men? A. there is no enforcement mechanism, and B. there is no higher good demanding such equality.There is no quandary presented, though, unless you think it necessary that the creator or governor of the immense universe thinks, or has somehow mandated, we creatures living here have certain "rights" or has granted us such, in order for there to be moral conduct. — Ciceronianus the White
I think it makes perfect sense to say "I have a right to be treated with dignity" as much as it is to say "You should treat me with dignity." — Hanover
That's a quibble really. I think it makes perfect sense to say "I have a right to be treated with dignity" as much as it is to say "You should treat me with dignity." — Hanover
Virtue ethics might be an example of normativity without rights. — Michael
That's a quibble really. I think it makes perfect sense to say "I have a right to be treated with dignity" as much as it is to say "You should treat me with dignity." — Hanover
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