it naturally emerges from a winner takes all system where plurality is enough and bribery is legal. — Benkei
Conspiracy theory is not even a defensible scientific concept, it is a metaphor, a figure of speech designed to belittle certain ideas that you don't like. — Rafaella Leon
This should not be some kind of surprise - their support of lawsuits guaranteed to fail is a feature, not a bug. — StreetlightX
"for a right to exist, it is necessary that, if not always, at least in certain cases, the holder of a right be also holder of the obligation to guarantee in turn someone the exercise of the power necessary to guarantee that right" — Rafaella Leon
A classic Chicken and egg situation. — Pop
China is arresting people who say things China's leadership does not want to be said. So a government does not have to protect freedom of speech, or does it? There are universal laws and man laws. Is denying people the right to speak going to make things better or worse? — Athena
We can imagine duties to exist without an underlying right to exist. — Benkei
However, I am extremely thankful that I live in a society where at least half the people believe we have rights. — Athena
What you said is true and is why I make my arguments! — Athena
Sworn affidavits, of which Rudy claims to have hundreds, is considered evidence the last time I checked. — NOS4A2
Social duties arise out of rights. — Athena
I've always understood it as reciprocity. If you believe you have a right and wish to have that respected, you have a dirty to respect another's same right. My right to property implies a duty to respect yours, if I don't I can't expect you to respect mine and the system collapses. — Benkei
I wish you'd visit my post there. (Just click on any part of my portion of the quote above here. It will take you there.) — god must be atheist
A right is what gets us what we want. A duty is taking responsibility for doing the right thing. — Athena
As to what natural duties are imparted upon those endowed with the natural rights, that sounds like you're asking what I'm commanded to do by virtue of my humanity. I suppose I would be prohibited from lying and stealing, should honor my mother and father, and shouldn't covet my neighbor's wife, to name a few. To be more secular about this, my duties might entail being a charitable and kind person. — Hanover
We hear this often, but I wonder what it means, at least in the context of a belief in natural rights. Does it mean there are natural duties as well as natural rights? If so, what are those duties? Is the duty being referred to simply an obligation not to infringe on the natural rights of others? That would seem merely another way of saying natural rights generally shouldn't be violated, which in turn seems to be merely a way of saying there are natural rights.There are no rights without duties. — Athena
Meanwhile, Rudy's Dripping Hair Dye stole the show. It was infinitely more classy than anything he actually said. — Wayfarer
This is actually a very serious question I ask. — god must be atheist
If yes, good for you, you fulfil your own definition of virtuous. If not, you have proven that you subscribe to self-interest, and as such, you declare (no, I don't declare that, because my values are different) that you are not virtuous. — god must be atheist
You decry certain rights as not virtuous. — god must be atheist
This, after you avoided the question of the right to own property being equally distributed among the population, which is independent of property distributed. — god must be atheist
You write so beautifully I didn't think I would find anything to argue. — Athena
However, there are people who would disagree with the above statement. Among some aboriginal people it would be taboo to accumulate wealth and not share. The chosen leader among native American tribes is the one who gives the most. — Athena
However, the US does tax people and distribute wealth to a limited degree. A minimum wage law, assistance programs take from some to give to others and hopefully most people think this the morally decent thing to do. — Athena
How can there be nature laws without natural rights? Are you saying Jefferson's word's wrong? — Athena
Likewise, it is the mark of a radical democrat to be able to vote against an autocrat without uncritically accepting the shil-technocrat alternative. — 180 Proof
I know all this because I talked to a priest about it, which was an interesting event. — Hanover
And there's the similarity in American law, where our Declaration states we have an inalienable right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, but the pre-13th Amendment Constitution specifically protected the institution of slavery. — Hanover
A question I'd submit to you is that If we're both in agreement with what the law ought to be (e.g. there should not be slaves), and we're both in agreement as to why the law ought be as it is (because natural law dictates such things), why would you want to maintain a system that allows government to pass laws that it shouldn't? Why don't you see the evolution toward a natural rights system a step forward? As you present it, you portray this step as a misstep. — Hanover
don't know, I am just providing some sort of outline. — schopenhauer1
It may not be a virtue but self-interest is why most people do what they do. If laws weren't in place to protect our interests then we would have no reason to follow them. — 8livesleft
If ancient Roman law held that all men were created equal by virtue of nature (https://www.politicalsciencenotes.com/cicero/political-ideas-of-cicero-natural-law-equality-and-idea-of-state/1039), then wouldn't this natural law concept necessarily translate into some form of natural right? Surely if I'm equal to you by virtue of my humanity, there must necessarily be some rule that if applied unequally would result in a violation of my natural right to be treated fairly. — Hanover
I’m reminded of the Jewish refugee from Nazi germany, Aryeh Neier, who while director of the ACLU defended the free speech rights of American Nazis to hold a rally in Chicago neighborhoods where many Holocaust survivors lived. Clearly the Nazi’s behavior was objectionable, ugly, and immoral, but the ACLU was right and moral in defending their right to engage in such conduct. — NOS4A2
So do you have a sort of history of how it went from Natural law as right conduct to Natural law as entitlements? I can think of John Locke perhaps. Life, liberty, property are basic freedoms that should be protected by governments, according to him. — schopenhauer1
I don't understand how your example establishes the ancient Greeks believed in natural rights as distinguished from natural law.You skipped my Greek example of our rights being well understood in ancient times. — Athena
Rightfully so in my opinion. To me, refusing to interfere in such a manner is good conduct, and defending their rights even better. Censure and objection are not infringements on another’s right, however. An infringement would be some sort of unjust reprisal, like imprisonment.
It is difficult to defend the rights of those who engage in objectionable conduct. But with practice it can be done and those who do so are moral and decent. — NOS4A2
