If it can't be defined, it is a mouthfart, a null concept.Maybe it defines the undefinable nature of 'right'.
The term is only relevant to the relationship of humans to humans.
In the big picture no entity has any 'rights'.
that's why I prefer the word privilege. Tobacco companies have the "rights" to produce toxic substances. That is their right because that is the law. Somehow I think life is a gift for all of us, and privileges is a word that fits better in that context, to me anywho.Maybe it defines the undefinable nature of 'right'.
The term is only relevant to the relationship of humans to humans.
In the big picture no entity has any 'rights'.
If it can't be defined, it is a mouthfart, a null concept.
that's why I prefer the word privilege. Tobacco companies have the "rights" to produce toxic substances. That is their right because that is the law. Somehow I think life is a gift for all of us, and privileges is a word that fits better in that context, to me anywho.
that's why I prefer the word privilege. Tobacco companies have the "rights" to produce toxic substances. That is their right because that is the law. Somehow I think life is a gift for all of us, and privileges is a word that fits better in that context, to me anywho.
Maybe it defines the undefinable nature of 'right'.
The term is only relevant to the relationship of humans to humans.
In the big picture no entity has any 'rights'.
It is rather a nihilistic approach to the subject.
The observation of fact and the absence of blind optimism isn't nihilistic but merely is.
I'm refining the definition here, Ludlow. Need your help.
You have a very good argument. I would agree that a "right" that is not secured by the laws might as well not exist. But our Founding Feathers talked a lot about "natural" or "God-given" rights, as did the British legal system. Was that just political balderdash to justify their treason, or did they have something there?
Natural rights? Can you please point to where his rights are? :lol:
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Nope. The fact that people assert rights that aren't provided in the law indicates that they are more than legal constructs.Rights are completely legal constructs.
Lol, it wasn't a criticism. Of course it's a human construct and it's entirely possible that some comet barreling towards us will render it entirely moot, but as long as we are here we do have to find some way to co-exist in some relatively harmonious manner. And on that level acknowledging others and their rights bears some level of importance.
Agreed. We need to get along to make our lives better.
The 'rights' you refer to are simply the considerations we show each other.
No entity has any right other than to exist.
To call the workings of society `rights` just seems arrogant.
Someone or some organization harming or discriminating against others
could be perceived as just the natural order.
Does the lion deprive the gazzel of `rights`?
Did you miss the fact that I did not say that there are "natural rights?" Rather, I said that our Founding Feathers (and a bunch of judges) put a lot of stock in the notion. Which is enough to make me at least think about it, though if you read the thread carefully, you'll see that I mostly agree with folks who say that rights are a social construct, more or less enshrined in the law, and not "natural" or "God-given" at all.
Nope. The fact that people assert rights that aren't provided in the law indicates that they are more than legal constructs.
If you actually feel like dealing with this on the level I know from experience you're capable of, why don't you try starting with SLM's genuinely brilliant, creative definition of rights, and my minor refinements thereof?
I hear a lot of talk about "rights." You have a right to do this, or a right to do that, or think this or that, or believe this or that. Nowadays you have a "right" to receive this or that.
But there ain't no point in debating a concept you can't define. So, I'll leave it up to the members here. Exactly what is a "right?"
I'm looking for a definition of the term here, not a laundry list of what you think your "rights" are.
More questions after we get a definition.
We have the right to exist.
After that we don't have any 'rights'. At least not any more than a dog, cat, ant or jellyfish...et al.
In our existence we can choose to create a society where we cooperate and treat each other with kindness. None of this, while I feel it is important to our continued existence, is actually a 'right'.
We can only choose to not fukk each other over in the name of greed.
I guess we may want to make that a 'right', if it is possible.