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{{Short description|Philosophical and political rights}} |
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{{other|Universalism (disambiguation)}} |
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{{Rights}} |
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{{Rights |Distinctions}} |
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Some philosophers distinguish two types of [[rights]], '''natural rights''' and '''legal rights'''.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Natural Rights {{!}} History of Western Civilization II|url=https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-hccc-worldhistory2/chapter/natural-rights/|access-date=14 October 2020|website=courses.lumenlearning.com|archive-date=17 October 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201017195210/https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-hccc-worldhistory2/chapter/natural-rights/|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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* Natural rights are those that are not dependent on the laws or customs of any particular culture or government, and so are ''universal'', ''[[fundamental rights|fundamental]]'' and ''inalienable'' (they cannot be repealed by human laws, though one can forfeit their enjoyment through one's actions, such as by violating someone else's rights). [[Natural law]] is the law of natural rights. |
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* Legal rights are those bestowed onto a person by a given [[legal system]] (they can be modified, repealed, and restrained by human laws). The concept of [[positive law]] is related to the concept of legal rights. |
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Natural law first appeared in [[ancient Greek philosophy]],<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Rommen |first1=Heinrich A. |last2=Hanley |first2=Thomas R. |title=The Natural Law: A Study in Legal and Social Philosophy |year=1998 |url=https://oll.libertyfund.org/title/hittinger-the-natural-law-a-study-in-legal-and-social-history-and-philosophy |access-date=7 March 2022 |publisher=Liberty Publishing |isbn=978-0865971615 |oclc=1004487064 |archive-date=7 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220307143257/https://oll.libertyfund.org/title/hittinger-the-natural-law-a-study-in-legal-and-social-history-and-philosophy |url-status=live }}{{Google books|plainurl=|id=bWkpAQAAMAAJ}}</ref> and was referred to by [[Roman philosopher]] [[Cicero]]. It was subsequently alluded to in the Bible,<ref>{{bibleverse||Romans|2:14–15|KJV}}</ref> and then developed in the [[Middle Ages]] by [[Catholic philosopher]]s such as [[Albert the Great]], his pupil [[Thomas Aquinas]], and [[Jean Gerson]] in his 1402 work "''De Vita Spirituali Animae."''<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Grellard |first=Christophe |date=2022-05-31 |title=Systèmes de pensées et de croyances médiévaux |url=https://journals.openedition.org/asr/4158 |journal= École Pratique des Hautes Études. Section des Sciences Religieuses|volume=129 |language=fr |issue=129 |pages=383–400 |doi=10.4000/asr.4158 |issn=0183-7478}}</ref> During the [[Age of Enlightenment]], the concept of natural laws was used to challenge the [[divine right of kings]], and became an alternative justification for the establishment of a [[social contract]], [[positive law]], and government – and thus legal rights – in the form of [[classical republicanism]]. Conversely, the concept of natural rights is used by others to challenge the legitimacy of all such establishments. |
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A '''natural right''' is a [[universality (philosophy)|universal]] [[right]] inherent in the nature of human beings and is not contingent on [[ethics]], human constructs, laws or beliefs. The right to breath, for example, cannot be legislated away, nor does it need to be granted on ethical grounds by a government or church. |
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The idea of [[human rights]] derives from theories of natural rights.<ref name=Jones>Jones, Peter. ''Rights''. Palgrave Macmillan, 1994, pp. 72, 74.{{ISBN?}}</ref> Those rejecting a distinction between human rights and natural rights view human rights as the successor that is not dependent on [[natural law]], [[natural theology]], or [[Christianity|Christian theological doctrine]].<ref name=Jones/> Natural rights, in particular, are considered beyond the authority of any government or [[Intergovernmental organizations|international body]] to dismiss. The 1948 United Nations [[Universal Declaration of Human Rights]] is an important [[legal instrument]] enshrining one conception of natural rights into international [[soft law]]. Natural rights were traditionally viewed as exclusively [[negative rights]],<ref>For example, the imperative "not to harm others" is said to be justified by natural law, but the same is not true when it comes to providing protection against harm</ref> whereas human rights also comprise positive rights.<ref>See James Nickel, [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/rights-human/ Human Rights] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190805003237/https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/rights-human/ |date=5 August 2019 }}, 2010. The claim that "..all human rights are negative rights.." is rejected, therefore human rights also comprise positive rights.</ref> Even on a natural rights conception of human rights, the two terms may not be synonymous. |
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The concept of [[natural law]] is derived from natural rights. During the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]], natural law opposed the [[divine right of kings]], and became the basis of [[classical liberalism]]. |
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The concept of natural rights is not universally accepted, partly due to its religious associations and perceived incoherence. Some philosophers argue that natural rights do not exist and that legal rights are the only rights; for instance, [[Jeremy Bentham]] called natural rights "simple nonsense".<ref>{{cite web |title=human rights – Natural law transformed into natural rights |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/human-rights/Natural-law-transformed-into-natural-rights |website=Britannica |access-date=3 August 2022 |language=en |archive-date=3 August 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220803204417/https://www.britannica.com/topic/human-rights/Natural-law-transformed-into-natural-rights |url-status=live }}</ref> [[Iusnaturalism]], particularly, holds that legal norms follow a human universal knowledge. Thus, it views enacted laws that contradict such universal knowledge as unjust and illegitimate, but some jusnaturalists might attribute the source of [[natural law]] to a [[Natural order (philosophy)|natural order]] instead of a divine mandate.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Vallejo |first=Catalina |title=Plurality of Peaces in Legal Action: Analyzing Constitutional Objections to Military Services in Colombia |date=2012 |publisher=LIT Verlag |isbn=9783643902825 |location=Berlin |pages=62}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Tella |first=María José Falcon y |title=A Three-Dimensional Theory of Law |date=2010 |publisher=Martinus Nijhoff Publishers |isbn=9789004179325 |location=Leiden |pages=204, 326}}</ref> |
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The concept of a natural right can be contrasted with the concept of a [[legal rights|legal right]]: A natural right is one that is claimed to exist even when it is not enforced by the [[government]] or [[society]] as a whole, while a legal right is a right specifically created by the government or society, for the benefit of its members. The question of which rights are natural and which are legal is an important one in [[philosophy]] and [[politics]]. Critics of the concept of natural rights argue that all human rights are legal rights, while proponents of the concept of natural rights in countries such as the [[United States of America|United States]] assert that founding documents like the [[United States Declaration of Independence|American Declaration of Independence]] and social contracts like the [[Constitution of the United States]] demonstrate the usefulness of recognizing natural rights. |
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==History== |
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The idea of [[human rights]] descended from that of natural rights; some recognize no difference between the two and regard both as labels for the same thing while others choose to keep the terms separate to eliminate association with some features traditionally associated with natural rights.<ref>Peter Jones. Rights. Palgrave Macmillan, 1994, p. 73</ref> Natural rights, in particular, are the rights of the [[individual]], and considered beyond the authority of a future government or [[Intergovernmental organizations|international body]] to dismiss. |
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The idea that certain rights are natural or inalienable also has a history dating back at least to the [[Stoics]] of [[late Antiquity]], through [[Thomism|Catholic law]] of the early [[Middle Ages]],<ref>{{Cite book |last=Tierney |first=Brian |title=The Idea of Natural Rights |publisher=Eerdmans |year=1997}}{{page needed|date=March 2022}}{{ISBN?}}</ref> and descending through the [[Protestant Reformation]] and the [[Age of Enlightenment]] to today.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Siedentop |first=Larry |title=Inventing the Individual: The Origins of Western Liberalism |publisher=Belknap Press |year=2014}}{{page needed|date=March 2022}}{{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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The existence of natural rights has been asserted by different individuals on different premises, such as ''[[A priori and a posteriori|a priori]]'' philosophical reasoning or religious principles. For example, [[Immanuel Kant]] claimed to derive natural rights through reason alone. The United States Declaration of Independence, meanwhile, is based upon the "[[self-evident]]" truth that "all men are ... endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights".<ref name="us-doi">{{cite web |url=https://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/declaration_transcript.html |title=America's Founding Documents | National Archives |website=Archives.gov |date=12 October 2016 |access-date=10 March 2017 |archive-date=12 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161012033301/http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/declaration_transcript.html |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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== Conceptions of natural rights == |
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Likewise, different philosophers and statesmen have designed different lists of what they believe to be natural rights; almost all include the right to life and [[liberty]] as the two highest priorities. [[H. L. A. Hart]] argued that if there are any rights at all, there must be the right to liberty, for all the others would depend upon this. [[T. H. Green]] argued that "if there are such things as rights at all, then, there must be a right to life and liberty, or, to put it more properly to free life."<ref>Green, T.H. (1883). ''Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation'', p. 114.{{ISBN?}}</ref> [[John Locke]] emphasized "life, liberty and property" as primary. However, despite Locke's influential defense of the [[right of revolution]], [[Thomas Jefferson]] substituted "[[Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness|pursuit of happiness]]" in place of "property" in the [[United States Declaration of Independence]].<ref>{{cite web |title=American Enlightenment Thought {{!}} Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy |url=https://iep.utm.edu/amer-enl/ |access-date=19 May 2021 |archive-date=3 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210503070123/https://iep.utm.edu/amer-enl/ |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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Many philosophers and statesmen have designed lists of what they believe to be natural rights; almost all include the right to [[life]] and [[liberty]], as these are considered to be the two highest priorities. |
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===Ancient=== |
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Among statesmen, the idea that certain [[Inalienable rights|rights are inalienable]] is found in early [[Sharia|Islamic law]] and [[Fiqh|jurisprudence]], which denied a ruler "the right to take away from his subjects certain rights which inhere in his or her person as a human being." Islamic rulers could not take away certain rights from their subjects on the basis that "they become rights by [[reason]] of the fact that they are given to a subject by a law and from a source which no ruler can question or alter."<ref>{{citation|title=Justice Without Frontiers|first=Christopher G.|last=Judge Weeramantry|year=1997|publisher=[[Brill Publishers]]|isbn=9041102418|pages=8, 132, 135}}</ref> |
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[[Stephen Kinzer]], a veteran journalist for ''The New York Times'' and the author of the book ''All The Shah's Men'', writes in the latter that: |
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{{blockquote|The Zoroastrian religion taught Iranians that citizens have an inalienable right to enlightened leadership and that the duty of subjects is not simply to obey wise kings but also to rise up against those who are wicked. Leaders are seen as representative of God on earth, but they deserve allegiance only as long as they have ''farr'', a kind of divine blessing that they must earn by moral behavior.}}<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kinzer |first1=Stephen |title=All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror |year=2004 |publisher=Wiley |isbn=978-0470581032 }}{{page needed|date=March 2022}}</ref> |
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Among philosophers, [[H. L. A. Hart]] has argued that if there are any rights at all, there must be the right to liberty, for all the others would depend upon this. The existence of natural rights has been asserted by different individuals on different premises, such as [[A priori and a posteriori (philosophy)|a priori]] philosophical reasoning or religious principles. For example, [[Immanuel Kant]] claimed to derive natural rights through "reason" alone. Some thinkers like [[John Locke]] emphasized "property" as primary. However, despite Locke's influential defense of the right of revolution, [[Thomas Jefferson]] substituted "pursuit of happiness" for property in the [[United States Declaration of Independence]]. The Declaration of Independence is based on natural or "unalienable rights" as being endowed by the Divine Creator or Nature's God to every human being, arguing that it was "self-evident" truth that human beings by their very nature inherently have and seek to experience the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. This being considered self-evident truth, like Hobbes, Locke and [[Jean–Jacques Rousseau]] — also a major social contract thinker — the right of human beings to follow their nature as a natural right antedating and not bestowed by government. |
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The 40 Principal Doctrines of the [[Epicureans]] taught that "in order to obtain protection from other men, any means for attaining this end is a natural good" (PD 6). They believed in a contractarian ethics where mortals agree to not harm or be harmed, and the rules that govern their agreements are not absolute (PD 33), but must change with circumstances (PD 37–38). The Epicurean doctrines imply that humans in their natural state enjoy personal sovereignty and that they must consent to the laws that govern them, and that this consent (and the laws) can be revisited periodically when circumstances change.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://epicurus.net/en/principal.html |title=Principle Doctrines |website=epicurus.net |access-date=27 June 2019 |archive-date=27 June 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190627190254/http://epicurus.net/en/principal.html |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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''(It should be made clear on what basis these rights exist. They are, for instance, not extended to non-humans. The criteria may be based on the existence of reason.)'' |
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The [[Stoics]] held that no one was a slave by nature; slavery was an external condition juxtaposed to the internal freedom of the soul (''[[sui juris]]''). [[Seneca the Younger]] wrote: |
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===Thomas Hobbes=== |
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{{blockquote|It is a mistake to imagine that slavery pervades a man's whole being; the better part of him is exempt from it: the body indeed is subjected and in the power of a master, but the mind is independent, and indeed is so free and wild, that it cannot be restrained even by this prison of the body, wherein it is confined.<ref>Seneca, ''De beneficiis'', III, 20.</ref>}} |
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The first philosopher who fully made natural rights the source of his moral and political philosophy was [[Thomas Hobbes]] (1588–1679). Hobbes argued that it is human nature to love one's self best and seek one's own good (this is a view known as [[psychological egoism]]). Since it is unavoidable ("necessity of nature") for human beings to follow their nature, it becomes a right to do so. According to Hobbes, to deny this right is to deny that we have a right to be human, which would be absurd, just as it would be absurd to demand that carnivores reject meat or that fish stop swimming. However, this was not a right in the conventional sense of imposing obligations on others, but merely a "liberty." Therefore, we have no obligations by birth or nature, but only unlimited rights — leading to a situation known as the "[[bellum omnium contra omnes|war of all against all]]", in which human beings have to kill, steal and enslave others in order to stay alive. Hobbes reasoned that this world of chaos created by unlimited rights was highly undesirable, causing human life to be "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short". As such, if humans wish to live peacefully they must give up most of their natural rights and create moral obligations in order to establish political and civil society. This is one of the earliest formulations of the theory of government known as the [[social contract]]. |
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Of fundamental importance to the development of the idea of natural rights was the emergence of the idea of natural human equality. As the historian A.J. Carlyle notes: "There is no change in political theory so startling in its completeness as the change from the theory of Aristotle to the later philosophical view represented by [[Cicero]] and Seneca. ... We think that this cannot be better exemplified than with regard to the theory of the equality of human nature."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Carlyle |first=A.J. |title=A History of Medieval Political Theory in the West |year=1903 |location=Edinburgh |volume=1 |pages=8, 9}}</ref> Charles H. McIlwain likewise observes that "the idea of the equality of men is the profoundest contribution of the Stoics to political thought" and that "its greatest influence is in the changed conception of law that in part resulted from it."<ref>{{Cite book |last=McIlwain |first=Charles H. |title=The Growth of Political Thought in the West: From the Greeks to the End of the Middle Ages |url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.6570 |year=1932 |location=New York |pages=[https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.6570/page/n347 114]–115}}</ref> Cicero argues in [[De Legibus]] that "we are born for Justice, and that right is based, not upon opinions, but upon Nature."<ref>Cicero, ''De Legibus'' (Keyes translation), book 1, section 28.</ref> |
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Hobbes objected to the attempt to derive rights from "[[natural law]]," arguing that law ("lex") and right ("jus") though often confused, signify opposites, with law referring to obligations, while rights refer to the absence of obligations. Since by our (human) nature, we seek to maximize our well being, rights are prior to law, natural or institutional. This marked an important departure from medieval natural law theories which gave priority to obligations over rights. However, some thinkers such as [[Leo Strauss]], maintained that Hobbes kept the primacy of natural law or moral obligation over natural rights, and thus did not fully break with medieval thought. |
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===Modern=== |
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One of the first Western thinkers to develop the contemporary idea of natural rights was French theologian [[Jean Gerson]], whose 1402 treatise ''De Vita Spirituali Animae'' is considered one of the first attempts to develop what would come to be called modern natural rights theory.<ref>Tuck, Richard. ''Philosophy and Government 1572–1651'' (1993), pp. 25–27. {{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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The [[Polish–Lithuanian union|Polish-Lithuanian union]] made a natural rights case at the [[Council of Constance]] (1414–1418), led by [[Paulus Vladimiri]], rector of the [[Jagiellonian University]]. He challenged legality of the [[State of the Teutonic Order|Teutonic Order]]'s [[Lithuanian Crusade|crusade against Lithuania]], arguing that the Order could only wage a defensive war if pagans violated the natural rights of the Christians. Vladimiri further stipulated that infidels had rights which had to be respected, and neither the Pope nor the [[Holy Roman Emperor]] had the authority to violate them. Lithuanians also brought a group of Samogitian representatives to testify to atrocities committed by the Order.<ref>{{cite book |first=Eric |last=Christiansen |title=The Northern Crusades |publisher=Penguin Books |year=1997 |edition=2nd |isbn=0-14-026653-4 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/northerncrusades00eric/page/231|page=231}}</ref> |
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[[John Locke]] (1632–1704), was another prominent Western philosopher who conceptualized rights as natural and inalienable. Like Hobbes, Locke was a major social contract thinker who argued that all people know what to do and why they do it therefore making sense. He said that man's natural rights are [[life]], [[liberty]], and [[property]]. |
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The Stoic doctrine that the "inner part cannot be delivered into bondage"<ref>Davis, David Brion (1966). ''The Problem of Slavery in Western Culture.'' Cornell University Press, p. 77. {{ISBN?}}</ref> re-emerged centuries later in the [[Protestant Reformation|Reformation]] doctrine of liberty of conscience. In 1523, [[Martin Luther]] wrote: |
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[[Thomas Paine]] (1731–1809) further elaborated on natural rights in his influential work ''[[Rights of Man]]'' (1791), emphasizing that rights cannot be granted by any charter because this would legally imply they can also be revoked and under such circumstances they would be reduced to privileges: |
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{{blockquote|Furthermore, every man is responsible for his own faith, and he must see it for himself that he believes rightly. As little as another can go to hell or heaven for me, so little can he believe or disbelieve for me; and as little as he can open or shut heaven or hell for me, so little can he drive me to faith or unbelief. Since, then, belief or unbelief is a matter of everyone's conscience, and since this is no lessening of the secular power, the latter should be content and attend to its own affairs and permit men to believe one thing or another, as they are able and willing, and constrain no one by force.<ref>Martin Luther, ''Concerning Secular Authority'', 1523.</ref>}} |
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{{quote|It is a perversion of terms to say that a charter gives rights. It operates by a contrary effect — that of taking rights away. Rights are inherently in all the inhabitants; but charters, by annulling those rights, in the majority, leave the right, by exclusion, in the hands of a few. ... They...consequently are instruments of injustice. |
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17th-century English philosopher [[John Locke]] discussed natural rights in his work, identifying them as being "life, liberty, and estate (property)", and argued that such [[fundamental rights]] could not be surrendered in the [[social contract]]. Preservation of the natural rights to life, liberty, and property was claimed as justification for the rebellion of the American colonies. As [[George Mason]] stated in his draft for the ''[[Virginia Declaration of Rights]]'', "all men are born equally free", and hold "certain inherent natural rights, of which they cannot, by any compact, deprive or divest their posterity."<ref>Maier, Pauline (1983). ''American Scripture: Making the Declaration of Independence.'' New York: [[Alfred A. Knopf]], 1993, p. 134.{{ISBN?}}</ref> Another 17th-century Englishman, [[John Lilburne]] (known as ''Freeborn John''), who came into conflict with both the monarchy of [[Charles I of England|King Charles I]] and the [[military dictatorship]] of [[Oliver Cromwell]], argued for level human basic rights he called "''[[freeborn]] rights''" which he defined as being rights that every human being is born with, as opposed to rights bestowed by government or by human law{{Citation needed|date=April 2021}}. |
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The fact therefore must be that the individuals themselves, each in his own personal and sovereign right, entered into a contract with each other to produce a government: and this is the only mode in which governments have a right to arise, and the only principle on which they have a right to exist.}} |
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The distinction between alienable and unalienable rights was introduced by [[Francis Hutcheson (philosopher)|Francis Hutcheson]]. In his ''Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue'' (1725), Hutcheson foreshadowed the Declaration of Independence, stating: "For wherever any Invasion is made upon unalienable Rights, there must arise either a perfect, or external Right to Resistance. ... Unalienable Rights are essential Limitations in all Governments." Hutcheson, however, placed clear limits on his notion of unalienable rights, declaring that "there can be no Right, or Limitation of Right, inconsistent with, or opposite to the greatest public Good."<ref>Hutcheson, Francis (2004), ''An Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue in Two Treatises'' (Indianapolis), pp. 192, 193.{{ISBN?}}</ref> Hutcheson elaborated on this idea of unalienable rights in his ''A System of Moral Philosophy'' (1755), based on the [[Protestant Reformation|Reformation]] principle of the liberty of conscience. One could not in fact give up the capacity for private judgment (e.g., about religious questions) regardless of any external contracts or oaths to religious or secular authorities so that right is "unalienable". Hutcheson wrote: "Thus no man can really change his sentiments, judgments, and inward affections, at the pleasure of another; nor can it tend to any good to make him profess what is contrary to his heart. The right of private judgment is therefore unalienable."<ref>Hutcheson, Francis. ''A System of Moral Philosophy''. London, 1755, pp. 261–262.{{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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===Contemporary proponents=== |
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In the [[Age of Enlightenment|German Enlightenment]], [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel|Hegel]] gave a highly developed treatment of this inalienability argument. Like Hutcheson, Hegel based the theory of inalienable rights on the ''de facto'' inalienability of those aspects of personhood that distinguish persons from things. A thing, like a piece of property, can in fact be transferred from one person to another. According to Hegel, the same would not apply to those aspects that make one a person: |
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Critics have argued that natural rights do not exist (in the sense that all rights are invented by men and are therefore by definition "artificial"). The attempt to derive rights from "natural law" or "human nature" is an example of the [[is-ought problem]] in philosophy, and, as noted above, different philosophers have created different lists of rights they consider to be natural. Proponents of natural rights, in particular Hesselberg and Rothbard, have responded that reason can be applied to separate truly [[axiom]]atic rights from supposed rights, stating that any principle that requires itself to be disproved is an axiom. Critics have pointed to the lack of agreement between the proponents as evidence for the claim that the idea of natural rights is merely a political tool. For instance, [[Jonathan Wallace (philosopher)|Jonathan Wallace]] has asserted that there is no basis on which to claim that some rights are natural, and he argued that Hobbes' account of natural rights confuses ''right'' with ''ability'' (human beings have the ''ability'' to seek only their own good and follow their nature in the same way as animals, but this does not imply that they have a ''right'' to do so).<ref>{{Cite web |
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| last = Wallace |
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| first = Jonathan |
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| title = Natural Rights Don't Exist |
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| work = The Ethical Spectacle |
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| accessdate = 2007-08-23 |
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| date = 2000-04 |
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| url = http://www.spectacle.org/0400/natural.html |
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}}</ref> Wallace advocates a social contract, much like Hobbes and Locke, but does not base it on natural rights: |
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{{blockquote|The right to what is in essence inalienable is imprescriptible, since the act whereby I take possession of my personality, of my substantive essence, and make myself a responsible being, capable of possessing rights and with a moral and religious life, takes away from these characteristics of mine just that externality which alone made them capable of passing into the possession of someone else. When I have thus annulled their externality, I cannot lose them through lapse of time or from any other reason drawn from my prior consent or willingness to alienate them.<ref>Georg W. F. Hegel, ''Hegel's Philosophy of Right'', T.M. Knox, trans., New York: Oxford University Press, 1967 (1821), section 66.</ref>}} |
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{{quote|We are all at a table together, deciding which rules to adopt, free from any vague constraints, half-remembered myths, anonymous patriarchal texts and murky concepts of nature. If I propose something you do not like, tell me why it is not practical, or harms somebody, or is counter to some other useful rule; but don't tell me it offends the universe.}} |
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In discussion of [[social contract]] theory, "inalienable rights" were said to be those rights that could not be surrendered by citizens to the sovereign. Such rights were thought to be ''natural rights'', independent of positive law. Some social contract theorists reasoned, however, that in the [[state of nature|natural state]] only the strongest could benefit from their rights. Thus, people form an implicit social contract, ceding their natural rights to the authority to protect the people from abuse, and living henceforth under the legal rights of that authority{{Citation needed|date=April 2021}}. |
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[[Jeremy Bentham]], a [[utilitarianism|utilitarian]] philosopher, famously stated: |
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Many historical apologies for slavery and illiberal government were based on explicit or implicit voluntary contracts to alienate any "natural rights" to freedom and [[self-determination]].<ref>Philmore, J. 1982. "The Libertarian Case for Slavery: A Note on Nozick". ''Philosophical Forum''. XIV (Fall 1982): 43–58.</ref> The ''de facto'' inalienability arguments of Hutcheson and his predecessors provided the basis for the [[Abolitionism|anti-slavery movement]] to argue not simply against involuntary slavery but against any explicit or implied contractual forms of slavery. Any contract that tried to legally alienate such a right would be inherently invalid. Similarly, the argument was used by the [[democratic movement]] to argue against any explicit or implied social contracts of subjection (''pactum subjectionis'') by which a people would supposedly alienate their right of self-government to a sovereign as, for example, in ''[[Leviathan (Hobbes book)|Leviathan]]'' by [[Thomas Hobbes]]. According to [[Ernst Cassirer]], |
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{{quote|Natural rights is simple nonsense: natural and imprescriptible rights, rhetorical nonsense — nonsense upon stilts.}} |
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{{blockquote|There is, at least, one right that cannot be ceded or abandoned: the right to personality...They charged the great logician [Hobbes] with a contradiction in terms. If a man could give up his personality he would cease being a moral being. ... There is no ''pactum subjectionis'', no act of submission by which man can give up the state of free agent and enslave himself. For by such an act of renunciation he would give up that very character which constitutes his nature and essence: he would lose his humanity.<ref>Cassirer, Ernst (1963). ''The Myth of the State''. Yale University Press, p. 175 {{ISBN?}}</ref>}} |
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== See also == |
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These themes converged in the debate about American independence. While Jefferson was writing the Declaration of Independence, Welsh nonconformist [[Richard Price]] sided with the colonists' claim that [[George III of the United Kingdom|King George III]] was "attempting to rob them of that liberty to which every member of society and all civil communities have a natural and unalienable title."<ref name="Price">Price, Richard (1979). ''Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty''. 1776, Part I. Reprinted in: Peach, Bernard, (Ed.) ''Richard Price and the Ethical Foundations of the American Revolution''. [[Duke University]] Press. {{ISBN?}}</ref>{{rp|67}} Price again based the argument on the ''de facto'' inalienability of "that principle of spontaneity or self-determination which constitutes us agents or which gives us a command over our actions, rendering them properly ours, and not effects of the operation of any foreign cause."<ref name="Price" />{{rp|67–68}} Any social contract or compact allegedly alienating these rights would be non-binding and void, wrote Price: |
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* [[natural person]] |
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* [[Leo Strauss]] |
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{{blockquote|Neither can any state acquire such an authority over other states in virtue of any compacts or cessions. This is a case in which compacts are not binding. Civil liberty is, in this respect, on the same footing with religious liberty. As no people can lawfully surrender their religious liberty by giving up their right of judging for themselves in religion, or by allowing any human beings to prescribe to them what faith they shall embrace, or what mode of worship they shall practise, so neither can any civil societies lawfully surrender their civil liberty by giving up to any extraneous jurisdiction their power of legislating for themselves and disposing their property.<ref name="Price" />{{rp|78–79}}}} |
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== References == |
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{{reflist}} |
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Price raised a furor of opposition so in 1777 he wrote another tract that clarified his position and again restated the ''de facto'' basis for the argument that the "liberty of men as agents is that power of self-determination which all agents, as such, possess."<ref>Price, Richard (1979). ''Additional Observations on the Nature and Value of Civil Liberty.'' Reprinted in: Peach, Bernard, (Ed.) ''Richard Price and the Ethical Foundations of the American Revolution''. Duke University Press, p. 136.{{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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[[Category:Human rights]] |
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In ''Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism'', [[Staughton Lynd]] pulled together these themes and related them to the slavery debate: |
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[[Category:Philosophy]] |
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{{blockquote|Then it turned out to make considerable difference whether one said slavery was wrong because every man has a natural right to the possession of his own body, or because every man has a natural right freely to determine his own destiny. The first kind of right was alienable: thus Locke neatly derived slavery from capture in war, whereby a man forfeited his labor to the conqueror who might lawfully have killed him; and thus Dred Scott was judged permanently to have given up his freedom. But the second kind of right, what Price called "that power of self-determination which all agents, as such, possess," was inalienable as long man remained man. Like the mind's quest for religious truth from which it was derived, self-determination was not a claim to ownership which might be both acquired and surrendered, but an inextricable aspect of the activity of being human.<ref>Lynd, Staughton (1969). ''Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism''. Vintage Books, 1969, pp. 56–57.{{ISBN?}}</ref>}} |
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[[bg:Естествено право]] |
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[[ku:Mafên xweriskî]] |
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Meanwhile, in America, [[Thomas Jefferson]] "took his division of rights into alienable and unalienable from Hutcheson, who made the distinction popular and important",<ref>Wills, Gary (1979). ''Inventing America''. New York: [[Random House|Vintage Books]], p. 213{{ISBN?}}</ref> and in the 1776 [[United States Declaration of Independence]], famously condensed this to: |
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[[tr:Doğal haklar]] |
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{{blockquote|We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights...}} |
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In the 19th century, the [[Abolitionism in the United States|movement to abolish slavery]] seized this passage as a statement of constitutional principle, although the [[Constitution of the United States|U.S. constitution]] recognized and protected the [[Slavery in the United States|institution of slavery]]. As a lawyer, future [[Chief Justice of the United States|Chief Justice]] [[Salmon P. Chase]] argued before the Supreme Court in the case of [[John Van Zandt]], who had been charged with violating the [[Fugitive Slave Act]], that: |
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{{blockquote|The law of the Creator, which invests every human being with an inalienable title to freedom, cannot be repealed by any interior law which asserts that man is property.}} |
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The concept of inalienable rights was criticized by [[Jeremy Bentham]] and [[Edmund Burke]] as groundless. Bentham and Burke claimed that rights arise from the actions of government, or evolve from tradition, and that neither of these can provide anything ''inalienable''. (See Bentham's "Critique of the Doctrine of Inalienable, Natural Rights", and Burke's ''[[Reflections on the Revolution in France]]''). Presaging the shift in thinking in the 19th century, Bentham famously dismissed the idea of natural rights as "nonsense on stilts". By way of contrast to the views of Burke and Bentham, [[Patriot (American Revolution)|Patriot]] scholar and justice [[James Wilson (Founding Father)|James Wilson]] criticized Burke's view as "tyranny".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Wilson |first=James |editor1-link=Robert G. McCloskey|editor=Robert Green McCloskey |title=The Works of James Wilson |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=Cambridge, MA |volume=2 |pages=586–589 }}{{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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The signers of the Declaration of Independence deemed it a "self-evident truth" that all men "are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights". |
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In ''[[The Social Contract]]'', [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]] claims that the existence of inalienable rights is unnecessary for the existence of a constitution or a set of laws and rights. This idea of a [[social contract]]{{spaced ndash}}that rights and responsibilities are derived from a consensual contract between the government and the people{{spaced ndash}}is the most widely recognized alternative. |
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One criticism of natural rights theory is that one cannot draw norms from facts.<ref name="Finnis">{{cite book |title=Natural Law & Natural Rights |url=https://archive.org/details/naturallawnatura00finn_556 |url-access=registration |publisher=Oxford University Press |author=Finnis, John |year=2011 |location=Oxford |pages=[https://archive.org/details/naturallawnatura00finn_556/page/n39 23]–58}}</ref> This objection is variously expressed as the [[is-ought problem]], the [[naturalistic fallacy]], or the [[appeal to nature]]. [[G.E. Moore]], for example, said that [[ethical naturalism]] falls prey to the naturalistic fallacy.{{Citation needed|date=July 2013}} Some defenders of natural rights theory, however, counter that the term "natural" in "natural rights" is contrasted with "artificial" rather than referring to [[nature]]. [[John Finnis]], for example, contends that [[natural law]] and natural rights are derived from self-evident principles, not from speculative principles or from facts.<ref name="Finnis" /> |
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There is also debate as to whether all rights are either natural or legal. Fourth president of the United States [[James Madison]], while representing Virginia in the House of Representatives, believed that there are rights, such as [[trial by jury]], that are [[social rights]], arising neither from [[natural law]] nor from [[positive law]] (which are the basis of natural and legal rights respectively) but from the [[social contract]] from which a government derives its authority.<ref>Introduction of the Bill of Rights in Congress, 1789 Jun 8, 21 Jul, 13, 18–19 August; Annals 1:424–450, 661–665, 707–717, 757–759, 766.</ref> |
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====Thomas Hobbes==== |
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{{Main|Thomas Hobbes}} |
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{{Primary sources|section|date=August 2020}} |
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[[File:Thomas Hobbes (portrait).jpg|upright=0.7|thumb|right|[[Thomas Hobbes]]]] |
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Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679) included a discussion of natural rights in his moral and [[political philosophy]]. Hobbes' conception of natural rights extended from his conception of man in a "state of nature". Thus he argued that the essential natural (human) right was "to use his own power, as he will himself, for the preservation of his own Nature; that is to say, of his own Life; and consequently, of doing any thing, which in his own judgement, and Reason, he shall conceive to be the aptest means thereunto." ([[Leviathan (Hobbes book)|''Leviathan'']]. 1, XIV) |
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Hobbes sharply distinguished this natural "liberty", from natural "laws", described generally as "a precept, or general rule, found out by reason, by which a man is forbidden to do, that, which is destructive of his life, or taketh away the means of preserving his life; and to omit, that, by which he thinketh it may best be preserved." ([[Leviathan (Hobbes book)|''Leviathan'']]. 1, XIV) |
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In his natural state, according to Hobbes, man's life consisted entirely of liberties and not at all of laws – "It followeth, that in such a condition, every man has the right to every thing; even to one another's body. And therefore, as long as this natural Right of every man to every thing endureth, there can be no security to any man... of living out the time, which Nature ordinarily allow men to live." ([[Leviathan (Hobbes book)|''Leviathan'']]. 1, XIV) |
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This would lead inevitably to a situation known as the "[[bellum omnium contra omnes|war of all against all]]", in which human beings kill, steal and enslave others to stay alive, and due to their natural lust for "Gain", "Safety" and "Reputation". Hobbes reasoned that this world of chaos created by unlimited rights was highly undesirable, since it would cause human life to be "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short". As such, if humans wish to live peacefully they must give up most of their natural rights and create moral obligations to establish political and [[civil society]]. This is one of the earliest formulations of the theory of government known as the [[social contract]]. |
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Hobbes objected to the attempt to derive rights from "[[natural law]]", arguing that law ("lex") and right ("jus") though often confused, signify opposites, with law referring to obligations, while rights refer to the absence of obligations. Since by our (human) nature, we seek to maximize our well being, rights are prior to law, natural or institutional, and people will not follow the laws of nature without first being subjected to a sovereign power, without which all ideas of [[Ethics|right and wrong]] are meaningless – "Therefore before the names of Just and Unjust can have place, there must be some coercive Power, to compel men equally to the performance of their Covenants..., to make good that Propriety, which by mutual contract men acquire, in recompense of the universal Right they abandon: and such power there is none before the erection of the Commonwealth." ([[Leviathan (Hobbes book)|''Leviathan'']]''. 1, XV) |
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This marked an important departure from medieval natural law theories which gave precedence to obligations over rights. |
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====John Locke==== |
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{{Main|John Locke}} |
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[[File:John Locke by Herman Verelst.jpg|upright=0.7|thumb|right|[[John Locke]], ''"Life, [[Liberty]], [[Estate (law)|Estate]]'' ([[property]])"]] |
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John Locke (1632–1704) was another prominent Western philosopher who conceptualized rights as natural and inalienable. Like Hobbes, Locke believed in a natural right to life, [[liberty]], and [[property]]. It was once conventional wisdom that Locke greatly influenced the [[American Revolution]] with his writings of natural rights, but this claim has been the subject of protracted dispute in recent decades. For example, the historian Ray Forrest Harvey declared that Jefferson and Locke were at "two opposite poles" in their political philosophy, as evidenced by Jefferson's use in the Declaration of Independence of the phrase "pursuit of happiness" instead of "property".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Harvey |first=Ray Forrest |title=Jean Jacques Burlamaqui: A Liberal Tradition in American Constitutionalism |year=1937 |location=Chapel Hill, NC |page=120}}{{ISBN?}}</ref> More recently, the eminent<ref>{{cite book | last1=Reid | first1=J.P. | last2=Hartog | first2=H. | last3=Bakken | first3=G.M. | last4=Nelson | first4=W.E. | last5=Bernstein | first5=R.B. | last6=Benedict | first6=M.L. | last7=Kern | first7=B.W. | last8=Flaherty | first8=M.S. | last9=Fritz | first9=C.G. | last10=Kalman | first10=L. | title=Law as Culture and Culture as Law: Essays in Honor of John Phillip Reid | publisher=Madison House Publishers | year=2000 | isbn=978-0945612742 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IR3HlZ9IQuEC}}</ref> legal historian John Phillip Reid has deplored contemporary scholars' "misplaced emphasis on John Locke", arguing that American revolutionary leaders saw Locke as a ''commentator'' on established constitutional principles.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Reid |first=John Phillip |title=Constitutional History of the American Revolution: The Authority To Tax |url=https://archive.org/details/constitutionalhi00reid |url-access=registration |year=1987 |location=Madison, Wis. |pages=[https://archive.org/details/constitutionalhi00reid/page/135 135]–136}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Reid |first=John Phillip |title=Constitutional History of the American Revolution: The Authority of Rights |url=https://archive.org/details/constitutionalhi00reid |url-access=registration |year=1986 |location=Madison, Wis. |pages=[https://archive.org/details/constitutionalhi00reid/page/132 132]–133}}</ref> [[Thomas Pangle]] has defended Locke's influence on the Founding, claiming that historians who argue to the contrary either misrepresent the classical republican alternative to which they say the revolutionary leaders adhered, do not understand Locke, or point to someone else who was decisively influenced by Locke.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Pangle |first=Thomas L. |author-link=Thomas Pangle |title=The Spirit of Modern Republicanism: The Moral Vision of the American Founders and the Philosophy of John Locke |year=1988 |location=Chicago |publisher=University of Chicago Press}}{{ISBN?}}</ref> This position has also been sustained by [[Michael Zuckert]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Zuckert |first=Michael P. |title=The Natural Rights Republic: Studies in the Foundation of the American Political Tradition |year=1996 |location=South Bend, IN |publisher=University of Notre Dame Press}}{{page needed|date=March 2022}}{{ISBN?}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Zuckert |first=Michael P. |title=Natural Rights and the New Republicanism |year=1998 |location=Princeton |publisher=Princeton University Press}}{{page needed|date=March 2022}}{{ISBN?}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Zuckert |first=Michael P. |title=Launching Liberalism: On Lockean Political Philosophy |year=2002 |location=Lawrence |publisher=University Press of Kansas}}{{page needed|date=March 2022}}{{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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According to Locke, there are three natural rights: |
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* Life: everyone is entitled to live.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Kunze |first1=Fred |title=A Biography of John Locke |url=http://www.let.rug.nl/usa/biographies/john-locke/ |website=American History from revolution to reconstruction and beyond |publisher=GMW – University of Groningen |access-date=20 July 2015 |archive-date=14 February 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190214002948/http://www.let.rug.nl/usa/biographies/john-locke/ |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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* Liberty: everyone is entitled to do anything they want to so long as it does not conflict with the first right. |
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* Estate: everyone is entitled to own all they create or gain through gift or trade so long as it does not conflict with the first two rights. |
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In developing his concept of natural rights, Locke was influenced by reports of society among [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native Americans]], whom he regarded as natural peoples who lived in a "state of liberty" and perfect freedom, but "not a state of license".<ref>John Locke, ''Two Treatises of Government – Of Civil Government'', Bk.2, Chap 2, "On The State of Nature", §4,6,14, Chap 5, "Of Property", §26 (London : Whitmore & Fenn) 1821 pp. 189, 191, 199, 209.</ref> It also informed his conception of [[social contract]]. Although he does not blatantly state it, his position implies that even in light of our unique characteristics we should not be treated differently by our neighbors or our rulers. "Locke is arguing that there is no natural characteristic sufficient to distinguish one person from another... of, course there are plenty of natural differences between us" (Haworth 103).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Haworth |first1=Alan |title=Understanding the Political Philosophers From Ancient to Modern Times |date=2014 |publisher=Taylor and Francis}}{{ISBN?}}</ref> What Haworth takes from Locke is that John Locke was obsessed with supporting equality in society, treating everyone as an equal. He does though highlight our differences with his philosophy showing that we are all unique and important to society. In his philosophy, it is highlighted that the ideal government should also protect everyone, and provide rights and freedom to everyone, because we are all important to society. His ideas then were developed into the movements for freedom from the British creating our government. However, his implied thought of freedom for all is applied most heavily in our culture today. Starting with the civil rights movement, and continuing through women's rights, Locke's call for a fair government can be seen as the influence in these movements. His ideas are typically just seen as the foundation for modern democracy; however, it is not unreasonable to credit Locke with the social activism throughout the history of America. |
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By founding this sense of freedom for all, Locke was laying the groundwork for the equality that occurs today. Despite the apparent misuse of his philosophy in early American democracy. The Civil Rights movement and the suffrage movement both called out the state of American democracy during their challenges to the government's view on equality. To them it was clear that when the designers of democracy said all, they meant all people shall receive those natural rights that John Locke cherished so deeply. "a state also of equality, wherein all the power and jurisdiction is reciprocal, no one having more than another" (Locke II,4).<ref>{{cite book |last1=Locke |first1=John |title=Two Treaties of Government |date=1999 |publisher=Cambridge University Press}}</ref> Locke in his papers on natural philosophy clearly states that he wants a government where all are treated equal in freedoms especially. "Locke's views on toleration were very progressive for the time" (Connolly).<ref>{{cite web |last1=Connolly |first1=Jacob |title=John Locke |url=https://iep.utm.edu/locke/#SH4c |publisher=Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy |access-date=27 February 2022 |archive-date=27 February 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220227193735/https://iep.utm.edu/locke/#SH4c |url-status=live }}</ref> Authors such as Jacob Connolly confirm that to them Locke was highly ahead of his time with all this progressive thinking. That is that his thought fits our current state of democracy where we strive to make sure that everyone has a say in the government, and everyone has a chance at a good life. Regardless of race, gender, or social standing starting with Locke it was made clear not only that the government should provide rights, but rights to everyone through his social contract.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Broers |first1=Adalei |title=John Locke on Equality, Toleration, and the Atheist Exception |journal=Inquiries Journal |year=2009 |volume=1 |issue=12 |url=http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/75/john-locke-on-equality-toleration-and-the-atheist-exception |access-date=26 May 2021 |language=en |archive-date=3 May 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210503151729/http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/75/john-locke-on-equality-toleration-and-the-atheist-exception |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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The social contract is an agreement between members of a country to live within a shared system of laws. Specific forms of government are the result of the decisions made by these persons acting in their collective capacity. Government is instituted to make laws that protect the three natural rights. If a government does not properly protect these rights, it can be overthrown.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Tuckness |first1=Alex |title=Locke's Political Philosophy |url=https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/locke-political/#SepaPoweDissGove |website=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |publisher=Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University |access-date=26 May 2021 |year=2020 |archive-date=5 September 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180905233403/https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/locke-political/#SepaPoweDissGove |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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====Thomas Paine==== |
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{{Main|Thomas Paine}} |
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[[File:Thomas Paine rev1.jpg|upright=0.7|thumb|right|[[Thomas Paine]]]] |
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Thomas Paine (1731–1809) further elaborated on natural rights in his influential work ''[[Rights of Man]]'' (1791),<ref>{{Cite web|title=Thomas Paine's Rights of Man|url=http://www.bl.uk/learning/timeline/item106644.html|access-date=14 October 2020|website=bl.uk|archive-date=27 November 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201127025807/https://www.bl.uk/learning/timeline/item106644.html|url-status=live}}</ref> emphasizing that rights cannot be granted by any charter because this would legally imply they can also be revoked and under such circumstances, they would be reduced to privileges: |
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{{blockquote|It is a perversion of terms to say that a charter gives rights. It operates by a contrary effect – that of taking rights away. Rights are inherently in all the inhabitants; but charters, by annulling those rights, in the majority, leave the right, by exclusion, in the hands of a few. ... They ... consequently are instruments of injustice. |
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The fact therefore must be that the individuals themselves, each in his own personal and sovereign right, entered into a compact with each other to produce a government: and this is the only mode in which governments have a right to arise, and the only principle on which they have a right to exist.}} |
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=== American individualist anarchists === |
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[[File:BenjaminTucker.jpg|thumb|right|upright=0.9|[[Benjamin Tucker]]]]While at first [[American individualist anarchists]] adhered to natural rights positions, later in this era led by [[Benjamin Tucker]], some abandoned natural rights positions and converted to [[Max Stirner]]'s [[Egoist anarchism]]. Rejecting the idea of moral rights, Tucker said there were only two rights: "the right of might" and "the right of contract".<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Goodway|first=David|year=2004|title=A cult of sensations: John Cowper Powys,s life philosophy and individualist anarchism.|journal=Powys Journal|volume=14|pages=45–80|jstor=26106709}}</ref> He also said, after converting to Egoist individualism, "In times past... it was my habit to talk glibly of the right of man to land. It was a bad habit, and I long ago sloughed it off. ... Man's only right to land is his might over it."<ref name="Ref_ac">Tucker, Instead of a Book, p. 350</ref> |
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According to [[Wendy McElroy]]: |
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{{blockquote|In adopting Stirnerite egoism (1886), Tucker rejected natural rights which had long been considered the foundation of libertarianism. This rejection galvanized the movement into fierce debates, with the natural rights proponents accusing the egoists of destroying libertarianism itself. So bitter was the conflict that a number of natural rights proponents withdrew from the pages of ''[[Liberty (1881–1908)|Liberty]]'' in protest even though they had hitherto been among its frequent contributors. Thereafter, Liberty championed egoism although its general content did not change significantly.<ref name="Ref_ad">{{cite web |url=http://oll.libertyfund.org/index.php?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php%3Ftitle=1300&layout=html#chapter_100896 |title=Literature of Liberty, Autumn 1981, vol. 4, No. 3 – Online Library of Liberty |website=Oll.libertyfund.org |access-date=2017-03-10 |archive-date=24 May 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110524105129/http://oll.libertyfund.org/index.php?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php%3Ftitle=1300&layout=html#chapter_100896 |url-status=live }}</ref>}} |
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Several periodicals were "undoubtedly influenced by ''Liberty'''s presentation of egoism, including ''I'' published by C.L. Swartz, edited by W.E. Gordak and J.W. Lloyd (all associates of ''Liberty''); ''The Ego'' and ''The Egoist'', both of which were edited by Edward H. Fulton. Among the egoist papers that Tucker followed were the German ''[[Der Eigene]]'', edited by [[Adolf Brand]], and ''The Eagle'' and ''The Serpent'', issued from London. The latter, the most prominent English-language egoist journal, was published from 1898 to 1900 with the subtitle 'A Journal of Egoistic Philosophy and Sociology{{'"}}.<ref name="Ref_ad" /> Among those American anarchists who adhered to egoism include [[Benjamin Tucker]], [[John Beverley Robinson (anarchist)|John Beverley Robinson]], [[Steven T. Byington]], [[Hutchins Hapgood]], [[James L. Walker]], [[Victor Yarros]] and E.H. Fulton.<ref name="Ref_ad" /> |
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==Contemporary== |
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Many documents now echo the phrase used in the [[United States Declaration of Independence]]. The preamble to the 1948 United Nations [[Universal Declaration of Human Rights]] asserts that rights are inalienable: "recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world." Article 1, § 1 of the [[California Constitution]] recognizes inalienable rights and articulated ''some'' (not all) of those rights as "defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness, and [[privacy]]." However, there is still much dispute over which "rights" are truly natural rights and which are not, and the concept of natural or inalienable rights is still controversial to some.{{Citation needed|date=April 2021}} |
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[[Erich Fromm]] argued that some powers over human beings could be wielded only by God, and that if there were no God, no human beings could wield these powers.<ref>[[Erich Fromm|Fromm, Eric]] (1973), ''The Revolution of Hope: Toward a Humanized Technology'', New York: Bantam.{{page needed|date=March 2022}}{{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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Contemporary political philosophies continuing the [[classical liberal]] tradition of natural rights include [[libertarianism]], [[anarcho-capitalism]] and [[Objectivism]], and include amongst their canon the works of authors such as [[Robert Nozick]], [[Ayn Rand]]<ref>[http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/individual_rights.html "Individual Rights" – Ayn Rand Lexicon]. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110701195908/http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/individual_rights.html |date=1 July 2011 }}. Retrieved 29 July 2013.</ref> and [[Murray Rothbard]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://mises.org/rothbard/ethics/ethics.asp |title=The Ethics of Liberty |website=Mises Institute |date=20 July 2005 |access-date=10 March 2017 |archive-date=9 November 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141109113441/http://mises.org/rothbard/ethics/ethics.asp |url-status=live }}</ref> A libertarian view of inalienable rights is laid out in Morris and Linda Tannehill's ''[[The Market for Liberty]]'', which claims that a man has a right to ownership over his life and therefore also his property, because he has invested time (i.e. part of his life) in it and thereby made it an extension of his life. However, if he initiates force against and to the detriment of another man, he alienates himself from the right to that part of his life which is required to pay his debt: "Rights are ''not'' inalienable, but only the possessor of a right can alienate himself from that right – no one else can take a man's rights from him."<ref>{{Cite book |title=The Market for Liberty |chapter=Man and Society |page=11 }}{{ISBN?}}</ref> |
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Various definitions of inalienability include non-relinquishability, non-salability, and non-transferability.<ref>{{Cite journal |title=A Libertarian Theory of Inalienability |author=Block, Walter |journal=Journal of Libertarian Studies |publisher=Mises Institute |volume=17 |issue=2 |date=Spring 2003 |pages=39–85 |url=https://mises.org/journals/jls/17_2/17_2_3.pdf |access-date=13 September 2014 |archive-date=2 July 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140702052835/http://mises.org/journals/jls/17_2/17_2_3.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> This concept has been recognized by libertarians as being central to the question of [[voluntary slavery]], which [[Murray Rothbard]] dismissed as illegitimate and even self-contradictory.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://mises.org/daily/2459 |title=A Crusoe Social Philosophy |newspaper=Mises Institute |date=February 9, 2007 |first1=Murray N. |last1=Rothbard |access-date=10 March 2017 |archive-date=17 November 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141117101537/https://mises.org/daily/2459 |url-status=dead }}</ref> [[Stephan Kinsella]] argues that "viewing rights as alienable is perfectly consistent with – indeed, implied by – the libertarian [[non-aggression principle]]. Under this principle, only the initiation of force is prohibited; [[defensive force|defensive]], [[restitutive]], or [[retaliatory force]] is not."<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://mises.org/journals/jls/14_1/14_1_4.pdf |first1=N. Stephan |last1=Kinsella |title=Inalienability and Punishment: A Reply to George Smith |via=Mises Institute |date=Winter 1998–1999 |journal=Journal of Libertarian Studies |volume=14 |issue=1 |access-date=10 March 2017 |archive-date=29 August 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120829163849/http://mises.org/journals/jls/14_1/14_1_4.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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Various philosophers have created different lists of rights they consider to be natural. Proponents of natural rights, in particular Hesselberg and [[Rothbard]], have responded that reason can be applied to separate truly [[axiom]]atic rights from supposed rights, stating that any principle that requires itself to be disproved is an axiom. Critics have pointed to the lack of agreement between the proponents as evidence for the claim that the idea of natural rights is merely a political tool. |
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Hugh Gibbons has proposed a descriptive argument based on human biology. His contention is that human beings were other-regarding as a matter of necessity, to avoid the costs of conflict. Over time they developed expectations that individuals would act in certain ways which were then prescribed by society (duties of care etc.) and that eventually crystallized into actionable rights.<ref>{{cite web |title=De Sciuridae et Homo Sapiens: The Origin of Rights and Duties |url=http://www.bu.edu/law/central/jd/organizations/journals/pilj/vol13no2/documents/13-2GibbonsArticle.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131127012511/http://www.bu.edu/law/central/jd/organizations/journals/pilj/vol13no2/documents/13-2GibbonsArticle.pdf |archive-date=27 November 2013 |access-date=10 March 2017 |website=Bu.edu}}</ref> |
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=== Catholic Church === |
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The [[Catholic Church]] considers natural law a [[Dogma in the Catholic Church|dogma]]. The Church considers that: "The natural law expresses the original moral sense which enables man to discern by reason the good and the evil, the truth and the lie: 'The natural law is written and engraved in the soul of each and every man, because it is human reason ordaining him to do good and forbidding him to sin . . . But this command of human reason would not have the force of law if it were not the voice and interpreter of a higher reason to which our spirit and our freedom must be submitted.{{' "}}<ref>{{Cite web|title=Catechism of the Catholic Church – IntraText|url=http://www.vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/_P6U.HTM|access-date=17 November 2020|website=vatican.va}}</ref> The natural law consists, for the Catholic Church, of one supreme and universal principle from which are derived all our natural moral obligations or duties. Thomas Aquinas resumes the various ideas of Catholic moral thinkers about what this principle is: since good is what primarily falls under the apprehension of the practical reason, the supreme principle of moral action must have the good as its central idea, and therefore the supreme principle is that good is to be done and evil avoided.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Catholic Encyclopedia: Natural Law|url=https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09076a.htm|access-date=17 November 2020|website=newadvent.org}}</ref> |
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==See also== |
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{{col div|colwidth=35em}} |
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* [[Constitutional economics]] |
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* [[Constitutionalism]] |
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* [[Dignity]] |
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* [[Need]] |
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* [[Legal positivism]] |
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* [[Natural-rights libertarianism]] |
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* [[Natural person in French law]] |
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* [[Rule according to higher law]] |
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* [[Rule of law]] |
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* [[Special rights]] |
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* [[Substantive due process]] |
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{{colend}} |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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==Further reading== |
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* Ellerman, David, ''Neo-Abolitionism: Abolishing Human Rentals in Favor of Workplace Democracy'', SpringerNature, 2021 {{ISBN| 978-3-030-62676-1}} |
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* Grotius, Hugo, ''The Rights Of War And Peace'': Three Volume Set, 1625 |
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* Haakonssen, Knud, ''Grotius, Pufendorf and Modern Natural Law'', 1999 {{ISBN?}} |
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* Hutcheson, Francis. ''A System of Moral Philosophy''. 1755, London. |
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* Locke, John. ''[[Two Treatises of Government]]''. 1690 (primarily the second treatise) |
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* Lloyd Thomas, D.A. ''Locke on Government''. 1995, Routledge. {{ISBN|0415095336}} |
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* {{cite encyclopedia|last=Miller |first=Fred |author-link=Fred Miller (philosopher)|editor-first=Ronald |editor-last=Hamowy |editor-link=Ronald Hamowy |encyclopedia=The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism |chapter=Rights, Natural|chapter-url=https://sk.sagepub.com/reference/libertarianism/n267.xml|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=yxNgXs3TkJYC |<!-- doi=10.4135/9781412965811.n267 | -->year=2008 |publisher= [[SAGE Publishing|Sage]]; [[Cato Institute]] |location= Thousand Oaks, CA |isbn= 978-1412965804 <!-- |oclc=750831024| lccn = 2008009151 --> |pages=434–436}} |
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* Pufendorf, Baron Samuel von,'' Law of Nature and Nations'', 1625 |
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* {{cite encyclopedia|last=Rasmussen |first=Douglas B.|author-link=Douglas B. Rasmussen|editor-first=Ronald |editor-last=Hamowy |editor-link=Ronald Hamowy |encyclopedia=The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism |chapter=Rights, Theory of|chapter-url=https://sk.sagepub.com/reference/libertarianism/n268.xml|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=yxNgXs3TkJYC |<!-- doi=10.4135/9781412965811.n268| -->year=2008 |publisher= [[SAGE Publishing|Sage]]; [[Cato Institute]] |location= Thousand Oaks, CA |isbn= 978-1412965804 <!-- |oclc=750831024| lccn = 2008009151 --> |pages=436–438}} |
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* Siedentop, Larry, ''Inventing the Individual: The Origins of Western Liberalism'', Belknap Press, 2014. {{ISBN?}} |
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* Tierney, Brian, ''The Idea of Natural Rights'', Eerdmans, 1997. {{ISBN?}} |
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* Tuck, Richard, ''Natural Rights Theories: Their Origin and Development'', 1982 {{ISBN?}} |
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* Waldron, Jeremy [ed.] ''Theories of Rights'' 1984, [[Oxford University Press]]. {{ISBN|0-19-875063-3}} |
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==External links== |
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{{Wikiquote|Natural rights}} |
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* [http://www.crf-usa.org/bill-of-rights-in-action/ The U.S. Declaration of Independence and Natural Rights] from Constitutional Rights Foundation |
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{{Rights theory}} |
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{{Human rights}} |
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{{Property navbox}} |
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[[Category:Legal doctrines and principles]] |
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[[Category:Political terminology]] |
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[[Category:Libertarian terms]] |
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[[Category:Libertarian theory]] |
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[[Category:Rights]] |
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[[Category:Animal rights]] |
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[[Category:Human rights concepts]] |
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[[Category:Sovereignty]] |
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[[Category:Universalism]] |
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Rights |
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Some philosophers distinguish two types of rights, natural rights and legal rights.[1]
- Natural rights are those that are not dependent on the laws or customs of any particular culture or government, and so are universal, fundamental and inalienable (they cannot be repealed by human laws, though one can forfeit their enjoyment through one's actions, such as by violating someone else's rights). Natural law is the law of natural rights.
- Legal rights are those bestowed onto a person by a given legal system (they can be modified, repealed, and restrained by human laws). The concept of positive law is related to the concept of legal rights.
Natural law first appeared in ancient Greek philosophy,[2] and was referred to by Roman philosopher Cicero. It was subsequently alluded to in the Bible,[3] and then developed in the Middle Ages by Catholic philosophers such as Albert the Great, his pupil Thomas Aquinas, and Jean Gerson in his 1402 work "De Vita Spirituali Animae."[4] During the Age of Enlightenment, the concept of natural laws was used to challenge the divine right of kings, and became an alternative justification for the establishment of a social contract, positive law, and government – and thus legal rights – in the form of classical republicanism. Conversely, the concept of natural rights is used by others to challenge the legitimacy of all such establishments.
The idea of human rights derives from theories of natural rights.[5] Those rejecting a distinction between human rights and natural rights view human rights as the successor that is not dependent on natural law, natural theology, or Christian theological doctrine.[5] Natural rights, in particular, are considered beyond the authority of any government or international body to dismiss. The 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights is an important legal instrument enshrining one conception of natural rights into international soft law. Natural rights were traditionally viewed as exclusively negative rights,[6] whereas human rights also comprise positive rights.[7] Even on a natural rights conception of human rights, the two terms may not be synonymous.
The concept of natural rights is not universally accepted, partly due to its religious associations and perceived incoherence. Some philosophers argue that natural rights do not exist and that legal rights are the only rights; for instance, Jeremy Bentham called natural rights "simple nonsense".[8] Iusnaturalism, particularly, holds that legal norms follow a human universal knowledge. Thus, it views enacted laws that contradict such universal knowledge as unjust and illegitimate, but some jusnaturalists might attribute the source of natural law to a natural order instead of a divine mandate.[9][10]
History
[edit]The idea that certain rights are natural or inalienable also has a history dating back at least to the Stoics of late Antiquity, through Catholic law of the early Middle Ages,[11] and descending through the Protestant Reformation and the Age of Enlightenment to today.[12]
The existence of natural rights has been asserted by different individuals on different premises, such as a priori philosophical reasoning or religious principles. For example, Immanuel Kant claimed to derive natural rights through reason alone. The United States Declaration of Independence, meanwhile, is based upon the "self-evident" truth that "all men are ... endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights".[13]
Likewise, different philosophers and statesmen have designed different lists of what they believe to be natural rights; almost all include the right to life and liberty as the two highest priorities. H. L. A. Hart argued that if there are any rights at all, there must be the right to liberty, for all the others would depend upon this. T. H. Green argued that "if there are such things as rights at all, then, there must be a right to life and liberty, or, to put it more properly to free life."[14] John Locke emphasized "life, liberty and property" as primary. However, despite Locke's influential defense of the right of revolution, Thomas Jefferson substituted "pursuit of happiness" in place of "property" in the United States Declaration of Independence.[15]
Ancient
[edit]Stephen Kinzer, a veteran journalist for The New York Times and the author of the book All The Shah's Men, writes in the latter that:
The Zoroastrian religion taught Iranians that citizens have an inalienable right to enlightened leadership and that the duty of subjects is not simply to obey wise kings but also to rise up against those who are wicked. Leaders are seen as representative of God on earth, but they deserve allegiance only as long as they have farr, a kind of divine blessing that they must earn by moral behavior.
The 40 Principal Doctrines of the Epicureans taught that "in order to obtain protection from other men, any means for attaining this end is a natural good" (PD 6). They believed in a contractarian ethics where mortals agree to not harm or be harmed, and the rules that govern their agreements are not absolute (PD 33), but must change with circumstances (PD 37–38). The Epicurean doctrines imply that humans in their natural state enjoy personal sovereignty and that they must consent to the laws that govern them, and that this consent (and the laws) can be revisited periodically when circumstances change.[17]
The Stoics held that no one was a slave by nature; slavery was an external condition juxtaposed to the internal freedom of the soul (sui juris). Seneca the Younger wrote:
It is a mistake to imagine that slavery pervades a man's whole being; the better part of him is exempt from it: the body indeed is subjected and in the power of a master, but the mind is independent, and indeed is so free and wild, that it cannot be restrained even by this prison of the body, wherein it is confined.[18]
Of fundamental importance to the development of the idea of natural rights was the emergence of the idea of natural human equality. As the historian A.J. Carlyle notes: "There is no change in political theory so startling in its completeness as the change from the theory of Aristotle to the later philosophical view represented by Cicero and Seneca. ... We think that this cannot be better exemplified than with regard to the theory of the equality of human nature."[19] Charles H. McIlwain likewise observes that "the idea of the equality of men is the profoundest contribution of the Stoics to political thought" and that "its greatest influence is in the changed conception of law that in part resulted from it."[20] Cicero argues in De Legibus that "we are born for Justice, and that right is based, not upon opinions, but upon Nature."[21]
Modern
[edit]One of the first Western thinkers to develop the contemporary idea of natural rights was French theologian Jean Gerson, whose 1402 treatise De Vita Spirituali Animae is considered one of the first attempts to develop what would come to be called modern natural rights theory.[22]
The Polish-Lithuanian union made a natural rights case at the Council of Constance (1414–1418), led by Paulus Vladimiri, rector of the Jagiellonian University. He challenged legality of the Teutonic Order's crusade against Lithuania, arguing that the Order could only wage a defensive war if pagans violated the natural rights of the Christians. Vladimiri further stipulated that infidels had rights which had to be respected, and neither the Pope nor the Holy Roman Emperor had the authority to violate them. Lithuanians also brought a group of Samogitian representatives to testify to atrocities committed by the Order.[23]
The Stoic doctrine that the "inner part cannot be delivered into bondage"[24] re-emerged centuries later in the Reformation doctrine of liberty of conscience. In 1523, Martin Luther wrote:
Furthermore, every man is responsible for his own faith, and he must see it for himself that he believes rightly. As little as another can go to hell or heaven for me, so little can he believe or disbelieve for me; and as little as he can open or shut heaven or hell for me, so little can he drive me to faith or unbelief. Since, then, belief or unbelief is a matter of everyone's conscience, and since this is no lessening of the secular power, the latter should be content and attend to its own affairs and permit men to believe one thing or another, as they are able and willing, and constrain no one by force.[25]
17th-century English philosopher John Locke discussed natural rights in his work, identifying them as being "life, liberty, and estate (property)", and argued that such fundamental rights could not be surrendered in the social contract. Preservation of the natural rights to life, liberty, and property was claimed as justification for the rebellion of the American colonies. As George Mason stated in his draft for the Virginia Declaration of Rights, "all men are born equally free", and hold "certain inherent natural rights, of which they cannot, by any compact, deprive or divest their posterity."[26] Another 17th-century Englishman, John Lilburne (known as Freeborn John), who came into conflict with both the monarchy of King Charles I and the military dictatorship of Oliver Cromwell, argued for level human basic rights he called "freeborn rights" which he defined as being rights that every human being is born with, as opposed to rights bestowed by government or by human law[citation needed].
The distinction between alienable and unalienable rights was introduced by Francis Hutcheson. In his Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue (1725), Hutcheson foreshadowed the Declaration of Independence, stating: "For wherever any Invasion is made upon unalienable Rights, there must arise either a perfect, or external Right to Resistance. ... Unalienable Rights are essential Limitations in all Governments." Hutcheson, however, placed clear limits on his notion of unalienable rights, declaring that "there can be no Right, or Limitation of Right, inconsistent with, or opposite to the greatest public Good."[27] Hutcheson elaborated on this idea of unalienable rights in his A System of Moral Philosophy (1755), based on the Reformation principle of the liberty of conscience. One could not in fact give up the capacity for private judgment (e.g., about religious questions) regardless of any external contracts or oaths to religious or secular authorities so that right is "unalienable". Hutcheson wrote: "Thus no man can really change his sentiments, judgments, and inward affections, at the pleasure of another; nor can it tend to any good to make him profess what is contrary to his heart. The right of private judgment is therefore unalienable."[28]
In the German Enlightenment, Hegel gave a highly developed treatment of this inalienability argument. Like Hutcheson, Hegel based the theory of inalienable rights on the de facto inalienability of those aspects of personhood that distinguish persons from things. A thing, like a piece of property, can in fact be transferred from one person to another. According to Hegel, the same would not apply to those aspects that make one a person:
The right to what is in essence inalienable is imprescriptible, since the act whereby I take possession of my personality, of my substantive essence, and make myself a responsible being, capable of possessing rights and with a moral and religious life, takes away from these characteristics of mine just that externality which alone made them capable of passing into the possession of someone else. When I have thus annulled their externality, I cannot lose them through lapse of time or from any other reason drawn from my prior consent or willingness to alienate them.[29]
In discussion of social contract theory, "inalienable rights" were said to be those rights that could not be surrendered by citizens to the sovereign. Such rights were thought to be natural rights, independent of positive law. Some social contract theorists reasoned, however, that in the natural state only the strongest could benefit from their rights. Thus, people form an implicit social contract, ceding their natural rights to the authority to protect the people from abuse, and living henceforth under the legal rights of that authority[citation needed].
Many historical apologies for slavery and illiberal government were based on explicit or implicit voluntary contracts to alienate any "natural rights" to freedom and self-determination.[30] The de facto inalienability arguments of Hutcheson and his predecessors provided the basis for the anti-slavery movement to argue not simply against involuntary slavery but against any explicit or implied contractual forms of slavery. Any contract that tried to legally alienate such a right would be inherently invalid. Similarly, the argument was used by the democratic movement to argue against any explicit or implied social contracts of subjection (pactum subjectionis) by which a people would supposedly alienate their right of self-government to a sovereign as, for example, in Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes. According to Ernst Cassirer,
There is, at least, one right that cannot be ceded or abandoned: the right to personality...They charged the great logician [Hobbes] with a contradiction in terms. If a man could give up his personality he would cease being a moral being. ... There is no pactum subjectionis, no act of submission by which man can give up the state of free agent and enslave himself. For by such an act of renunciation he would give up that very character which constitutes his nature and essence: he would lose his humanity.[31]
These themes converged in the debate about American independence. While Jefferson was writing the Declaration of Independence, Welsh nonconformist Richard Price sided with the colonists' claim that King George III was "attempting to rob them of that liberty to which every member of society and all civil communities have a natural and unalienable title."[32]: 67 Price again based the argument on the de facto inalienability of "that principle of spontaneity or self-determination which constitutes us agents or which gives us a command over our actions, rendering them properly ours, and not effects of the operation of any foreign cause."[32]: 67–68 Any social contract or compact allegedly alienating these rights would be non-binding and void, wrote Price:
Neither can any state acquire such an authority over other states in virtue of any compacts or cessions. This is a case in which compacts are not binding. Civil liberty is, in this respect, on the same footing with religious liberty. As no people can lawfully surrender their religious liberty by giving up their right of judging for themselves in religion, or by allowing any human beings to prescribe to them what faith they shall embrace, or what mode of worship they shall practise, so neither can any civil societies lawfully surrender their civil liberty by giving up to any extraneous jurisdiction their power of legislating for themselves and disposing their property.[32]: 78–79
Price raised a furor of opposition so in 1777 he wrote another tract that clarified his position and again restated the de facto basis for the argument that the "liberty of men as agents is that power of self-determination which all agents, as such, possess."[33] In Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism, Staughton Lynd pulled together these themes and related them to the slavery debate:
Then it turned out to make considerable difference whether one said slavery was wrong because every man has a natural right to the possession of his own body, or because every man has a natural right freely to determine his own destiny. The first kind of right was alienable: thus Locke neatly derived slavery from capture in war, whereby a man forfeited his labor to the conqueror who might lawfully have killed him; and thus Dred Scott was judged permanently to have given up his freedom. But the second kind of right, what Price called "that power of self-determination which all agents, as such, possess," was inalienable as long man remained man. Like the mind's quest for religious truth from which it was derived, self-determination was not a claim to ownership which might be both acquired and surrendered, but an inextricable aspect of the activity of being human.[34]
Meanwhile, in America, Thomas Jefferson "took his division of rights into alienable and unalienable from Hutcheson, who made the distinction popular and important",[35] and in the 1776 United States Declaration of Independence, famously condensed this to:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights...
In the 19th century, the movement to abolish slavery seized this passage as a statement of constitutional principle, although the U.S. constitution recognized and protected the institution of slavery. As a lawyer, future Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase argued before the Supreme Court in the case of John Van Zandt, who had been charged with violating the Fugitive Slave Act, that:
The law of the Creator, which invests every human being with an inalienable title to freedom, cannot be repealed by any interior law which asserts that man is property.
The concept of inalienable rights was criticized by Jeremy Bentham and Edmund Burke as groundless. Bentham and Burke claimed that rights arise from the actions of government, or evolve from tradition, and that neither of these can provide anything inalienable. (See Bentham's "Critique of the Doctrine of Inalienable, Natural Rights", and Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France). Presaging the shift in thinking in the 19th century, Bentham famously dismissed the idea of natural rights as "nonsense on stilts". By way of contrast to the views of Burke and Bentham, Patriot scholar and justice James Wilson criticized Burke's view as "tyranny".[36]
The signers of the Declaration of Independence deemed it a "self-evident truth" that all men "are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights". In The Social Contract, Jean-Jacques Rousseau claims that the existence of inalienable rights is unnecessary for the existence of a constitution or a set of laws and rights. This idea of a social contract – that rights and responsibilities are derived from a consensual contract between the government and the people – is the most widely recognized alternative.
One criticism of natural rights theory is that one cannot draw norms from facts.[37] This objection is variously expressed as the is-ought problem, the naturalistic fallacy, or the appeal to nature. G.E. Moore, for example, said that ethical naturalism falls prey to the naturalistic fallacy.[citation needed] Some defenders of natural rights theory, however, counter that the term "natural" in "natural rights" is contrasted with "artificial" rather than referring to nature. John Finnis, for example, contends that natural law and natural rights are derived from self-evident principles, not from speculative principles or from facts.[37]
There is also debate as to whether all rights are either natural or legal. Fourth president of the United States James Madison, while representing Virginia in the House of Representatives, believed that there are rights, such as trial by jury, that are social rights, arising neither from natural law nor from positive law (which are the basis of natural and legal rights respectively) but from the social contract from which a government derives its authority.[38]
Thomas Hobbes
[edit]Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679) included a discussion of natural rights in his moral and political philosophy. Hobbes' conception of natural rights extended from his conception of man in a "state of nature". Thus he argued that the essential natural (human) right was "to use his own power, as he will himself, for the preservation of his own Nature; that is to say, of his own Life; and consequently, of doing any thing, which in his own judgement, and Reason, he shall conceive to be the aptest means thereunto." (Leviathan. 1, XIV)
Hobbes sharply distinguished this natural "liberty", from natural "laws", described generally as "a precept, or general rule, found out by reason, by which a man is forbidden to do, that, which is destructive of his life, or taketh away the means of preserving his life; and to omit, that, by which he thinketh it may best be preserved." (Leviathan. 1, XIV)
In his natural state, according to Hobbes, man's life consisted entirely of liberties and not at all of laws – "It followeth, that in such a condition, every man has the right to every thing; even to one another's body. And therefore, as long as this natural Right of every man to every thing endureth, there can be no security to any man... of living out the time, which Nature ordinarily allow men to live." (Leviathan. 1, XIV)
This would lead inevitably to a situation known as the "war of all against all", in which human beings kill, steal and enslave others to stay alive, and due to their natural lust for "Gain", "Safety" and "Reputation". Hobbes reasoned that this world of chaos created by unlimited rights was highly undesirable, since it would cause human life to be "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short". As such, if humans wish to live peacefully they must give up most of their natural rights and create moral obligations to establish political and civil society. This is one of the earliest formulations of the theory of government known as the social contract.
Hobbes objected to the attempt to derive rights from "natural law", arguing that law ("lex") and right ("jus") though often confused, signify opposites, with law referring to obligations, while rights refer to the absence of obligations. Since by our (human) nature, we seek to maximize our well being, rights are prior to law, natural or institutional, and people will not follow the laws of nature without first being subjected to a sovereign power, without which all ideas of right and wrong are meaningless – "Therefore before the names of Just and Unjust can have place, there must be some coercive Power, to compel men equally to the performance of their Covenants..., to make good that Propriety, which by mutual contract men acquire, in recompense of the universal Right they abandon: and such power there is none before the erection of the Commonwealth." (Leviathan. 1, XV)
This marked an important departure from medieval natural law theories which gave precedence to obligations over rights.
John Locke
[edit]John Locke (1632–1704) was another prominent Western philosopher who conceptualized rights as natural and inalienable. Like Hobbes, Locke believed in a natural right to life, liberty, and property. It was once conventional wisdom that Locke greatly influenced the American Revolution with his writings of natural rights, but this claim has been the subject of protracted dispute in recent decades. For example, the historian Ray Forrest Harvey declared that Jefferson and Locke were at "two opposite poles" in their political philosophy, as evidenced by Jefferson's use in the Declaration of Independence of the phrase "pursuit of happiness" instead of "property".[39] More recently, the eminent[40] legal historian John Phillip Reid has deplored contemporary scholars' "misplaced emphasis on John Locke", arguing that American revolutionary leaders saw Locke as a commentator on established constitutional principles.[41][42] Thomas Pangle has defended Locke's influence on the Founding, claiming that historians who argue to the contrary either misrepresent the classical republican alternative to which they say the revolutionary leaders adhered, do not understand Locke, or point to someone else who was decisively influenced by Locke.[43] This position has also been sustained by Michael Zuckert.[44][45][46]
According to Locke, there are three natural rights:
- Life: everyone is entitled to live.[47]
- Liberty: everyone is entitled to do anything they want to so long as it does not conflict with the first right.
- Estate: everyone is entitled to own all they create or gain through gift or trade so long as it does not conflict with the first two rights.
In developing his concept of natural rights, Locke was influenced by reports of society among Native Americans, whom he regarded as natural peoples who lived in a "state of liberty" and perfect freedom, but "not a state of license".[48] It also informed his conception of social contract. Although he does not blatantly state it, his position implies that even in light of our unique characteristics we should not be treated differently by our neighbors or our rulers. "Locke is arguing that there is no natural characteristic sufficient to distinguish one person from another... of, course there are plenty of natural differences between us" (Haworth 103).[49] What Haworth takes from Locke is that John Locke was obsessed with supporting equality in society, treating everyone as an equal. He does though highlight our differences with his philosophy showing that we are all unique and important to society. In his philosophy, it is highlighted that the ideal government should also protect everyone, and provide rights and freedom to everyone, because we are all important to society. His ideas then were developed into the movements for freedom from the British creating our government. However, his implied thought of freedom for all is applied most heavily in our culture today. Starting with the civil rights movement, and continuing through women's rights, Locke's call for a fair government can be seen as the influence in these movements. His ideas are typically just seen as the foundation for modern democracy; however, it is not unreasonable to credit Locke with the social activism throughout the history of America.
By founding this sense of freedom for all, Locke was laying the groundwork for the equality that occurs today. Despite the apparent misuse of his philosophy in early American democracy. The Civil Rights movement and the suffrage movement both called out the state of American democracy during their challenges to the government's view on equality. To them it was clear that when the designers of democracy said all, they meant all people shall receive those natural rights that John Locke cherished so deeply. "a state also of equality, wherein all the power and jurisdiction is reciprocal, no one having more than another" (Locke II,4).[50] Locke in his papers on natural philosophy clearly states that he wants a government where all are treated equal in freedoms especially. "Locke's views on toleration were very progressive for the time" (Connolly).[51] Authors such as Jacob Connolly confirm that to them Locke was highly ahead of his time with all this progressive thinking. That is that his thought fits our current state of democracy where we strive to make sure that everyone has a say in the government, and everyone has a chance at a good life. Regardless of race, gender, or social standing starting with Locke it was made clear not only that the government should provide rights, but rights to everyone through his social contract.[52]
The social contract is an agreement between members of a country to live within a shared system of laws. Specific forms of government are the result of the decisions made by these persons acting in their collective capacity. Government is instituted to make laws that protect the three natural rights. If a government does not properly protect these rights, it can be overthrown.[53]
Thomas Paine
[edit]Thomas Paine (1731–1809) further elaborated on natural rights in his influential work Rights of Man (1791),[54] emphasizing that rights cannot be granted by any charter because this would legally imply they can also be revoked and under such circumstances, they would be reduced to privileges:
It is a perversion of terms to say that a charter gives rights. It operates by a contrary effect – that of taking rights away. Rights are inherently in all the inhabitants; but charters, by annulling those rights, in the majority, leave the right, by exclusion, in the hands of a few. ... They ... consequently are instruments of injustice. The fact therefore must be that the individuals themselves, each in his own personal and sovereign right, entered into a compact with each other to produce a government: and this is the only mode in which governments have a right to arise, and the only principle on which they have a right to exist.
American individualist anarchists
[edit]While at first American individualist anarchists adhered to natural rights positions, later in this era led by Benjamin Tucker, some abandoned natural rights positions and converted to Max Stirner's Egoist anarchism. Rejecting the idea of moral rights, Tucker said there were only two rights: "the right of might" and "the right of contract".[55] He also said, after converting to Egoist individualism, "In times past... it was my habit to talk glibly of the right of man to land. It was a bad habit, and I long ago sloughed it off. ... Man's only right to land is his might over it."[56]
According to Wendy McElroy:
In adopting Stirnerite egoism (1886), Tucker rejected natural rights which had long been considered the foundation of libertarianism. This rejection galvanized the movement into fierce debates, with the natural rights proponents accusing the egoists of destroying libertarianism itself. So bitter was the conflict that a number of natural rights proponents withdrew from the pages of Liberty in protest even though they had hitherto been among its frequent contributors. Thereafter, Liberty championed egoism although its general content did not change significantly.[57]
Several periodicals were "undoubtedly influenced by Liberty's presentation of egoism, including I published by C.L. Swartz, edited by W.E. Gordak and J.W. Lloyd (all associates of Liberty); The Ego and The Egoist, both of which were edited by Edward H. Fulton. Among the egoist papers that Tucker followed were the German Der Eigene, edited by Adolf Brand, and The Eagle and The Serpent, issued from London. The latter, the most prominent English-language egoist journal, was published from 1898 to 1900 with the subtitle 'A Journal of Egoistic Philosophy and Sociology'".[57] Among those American anarchists who adhered to egoism include Benjamin Tucker, John Beverley Robinson, Steven T. Byington, Hutchins Hapgood, James L. Walker, Victor Yarros and E.H. Fulton.[57]
Contemporary
[edit]Many documents now echo the phrase used in the United States Declaration of Independence. The preamble to the 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights asserts that rights are inalienable: "recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world." Article 1, § 1 of the California Constitution recognizes inalienable rights and articulated some (not all) of those rights as "defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness, and privacy." However, there is still much dispute over which "rights" are truly natural rights and which are not, and the concept of natural or inalienable rights is still controversial to some.[citation needed]
Erich Fromm argued that some powers over human beings could be wielded only by God, and that if there were no God, no human beings could wield these powers.[58]
Contemporary political philosophies continuing the classical liberal tradition of natural rights include libertarianism, anarcho-capitalism and Objectivism, and include amongst their canon the works of authors such as Robert Nozick, Ayn Rand[59] and Murray Rothbard.[60] A libertarian view of inalienable rights is laid out in Morris and Linda Tannehill's The Market for Liberty, which claims that a man has a right to ownership over his life and therefore also his property, because he has invested time (i.e. part of his life) in it and thereby made it an extension of his life. However, if he initiates force against and to the detriment of another man, he alienates himself from the right to that part of his life which is required to pay his debt: "Rights are not inalienable, but only the possessor of a right can alienate himself from that right – no one else can take a man's rights from him."[61]
Various definitions of inalienability include non-relinquishability, non-salability, and non-transferability.[62] This concept has been recognized by libertarians as being central to the question of voluntary slavery, which Murray Rothbard dismissed as illegitimate and even self-contradictory.[63] Stephan Kinsella argues that "viewing rights as alienable is perfectly consistent with – indeed, implied by – the libertarian non-aggression principle. Under this principle, only the initiation of force is prohibited; defensive, restitutive, or retaliatory force is not."[64]
Various philosophers have created different lists of rights they consider to be natural. Proponents of natural rights, in particular Hesselberg and Rothbard, have responded that reason can be applied to separate truly axiomatic rights from supposed rights, stating that any principle that requires itself to be disproved is an axiom. Critics have pointed to the lack of agreement between the proponents as evidence for the claim that the idea of natural rights is merely a political tool.
Hugh Gibbons has proposed a descriptive argument based on human biology. His contention is that human beings were other-regarding as a matter of necessity, to avoid the costs of conflict. Over time they developed expectations that individuals would act in certain ways which were then prescribed by society (duties of care etc.) and that eventually crystallized into actionable rights.[65]
Catholic Church
[edit]The Catholic Church considers natural law a dogma. The Church considers that: "The natural law expresses the original moral sense which enables man to discern by reason the good and the evil, the truth and the lie: 'The natural law is written and engraved in the soul of each and every man, because it is human reason ordaining him to do good and forbidding him to sin . . . But this command of human reason would not have the force of law if it were not the voice and interpreter of a higher reason to which our spirit and our freedom must be submitted.'"[66] The natural law consists, for the Catholic Church, of one supreme and universal principle from which are derived all our natural moral obligations or duties. Thomas Aquinas resumes the various ideas of Catholic moral thinkers about what this principle is: since good is what primarily falls under the apprehension of the practical reason, the supreme principle of moral action must have the good as its central idea, and therefore the supreme principle is that good is to be done and evil avoided.[67]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Natural Rights | History of Western Civilization II". courses.lumenlearning.com. Archived from the original on 17 October 2020. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
- ^ Rommen, Heinrich A.; Hanley, Thomas R. (1998). The Natural Law: A Study in Legal and Social Philosophy. Liberty Publishing. ISBN 978-0865971615. OCLC 1004487064. Archived from the original on 7 March 2022. Retrieved 7 March 2022.Natural rights and legal rights at Google Books
- ^ Romans 2:14–15
- ^ Grellard, Christophe (31 May 2022). "Systèmes de pensées et de croyances médiévaux". École Pratique des Hautes Études. Section des Sciences Religieuses (in French). 129 (129): 383–400. doi:10.4000/asr.4158. ISSN 0183-7478.
- ^ a b Jones, Peter. Rights. Palgrave Macmillan, 1994, pp. 72, 74.[ISBN missing]
- ^ For example, the imperative "not to harm others" is said to be justified by natural law, but the same is not true when it comes to providing protection against harm
- ^ See James Nickel, Human Rights Archived 5 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine, 2010. The claim that "..all human rights are negative rights.." is rejected, therefore human rights also comprise positive rights.
- ^ "human rights – Natural law transformed into natural rights". Britannica. Archived from the original on 3 August 2022. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
- ^ Vallejo, Catalina (2012). Plurality of Peaces in Legal Action: Analyzing Constitutional Objections to Military Services in Colombia. Berlin: LIT Verlag. p. 62. ISBN 9783643902825.
- ^ Tella, María José Falcon y (2010). A Three-Dimensional Theory of Law. Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. pp. 204, 326. ISBN 9789004179325.
- ^ Tierney, Brian (1997). The Idea of Natural Rights. Eerdmans.[page needed][ISBN missing]
- ^ Siedentop, Larry (2014). Inventing the Individual: The Origins of Western Liberalism. Belknap Press.[page needed][ISBN missing]
- ^ "America's Founding Documents | National Archives". Archives.gov. 12 October 2016. Archived from the original on 12 October 2016. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
- ^ Green, T.H. (1883). Lectures on the Principles of Political Obligation, p. 114.[ISBN missing]
- ^ "American Enlightenment Thought | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy". Archived from the original on 3 May 2021. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
- ^ Kinzer, Stephen (2004). All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror. Wiley. ISBN 978-0470581032.[page needed]
- ^ "Principle Doctrines". epicurus.net. Archived from the original on 27 June 2019. Retrieved 27 June 2019.
- ^ Seneca, De beneficiis, III, 20.
- ^ Carlyle, A.J. (1903). A History of Medieval Political Theory in the West. Vol. 1. Edinburgh. pp. 8, 9.
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- ^ Tuck, Richard. Philosophy and Government 1572–1651 (1993), pp. 25–27. [ISBN missing]
- ^ Christiansen, Eric (1997). The Northern Crusades (2nd ed.). Penguin Books. p. 231. ISBN 0-14-026653-4.
- ^ Davis, David Brion (1966). The Problem of Slavery in Western Culture. Cornell University Press, p. 77. [ISBN missing]
- ^ Martin Luther, Concerning Secular Authority, 1523.
- ^ Maier, Pauline (1983). American Scripture: Making the Declaration of Independence. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1993, p. 134.[ISBN missing]
- ^ Hutcheson, Francis (2004), An Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and Virtue in Two Treatises (Indianapolis), pp. 192, 193.[ISBN missing]
- ^ Hutcheson, Francis. A System of Moral Philosophy. London, 1755, pp. 261–262.[ISBN missing]
- ^ Georg W. F. Hegel, Hegel's Philosophy of Right, T.M. Knox, trans., New York: Oxford University Press, 1967 (1821), section 66.
- ^ Philmore, J. 1982. "The Libertarian Case for Slavery: A Note on Nozick". Philosophical Forum. XIV (Fall 1982): 43–58.
- ^ Cassirer, Ernst (1963). The Myth of the State. Yale University Press, p. 175 [ISBN missing]
- ^ a b c Price, Richard (1979). Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty. 1776, Part I. Reprinted in: Peach, Bernard, (Ed.) Richard Price and the Ethical Foundations of the American Revolution. Duke University Press. [ISBN missing]
- ^ Price, Richard (1979). Additional Observations on the Nature and Value of Civil Liberty. Reprinted in: Peach, Bernard, (Ed.) Richard Price and the Ethical Foundations of the American Revolution. Duke University Press, p. 136.[ISBN missing]
- ^ Lynd, Staughton (1969). Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism. Vintage Books, 1969, pp. 56–57.[ISBN missing]
- ^ Wills, Gary (1979). Inventing America. New York: Vintage Books, p. 213[ISBN missing]
- ^ Wilson, James. Robert Green McCloskey (ed.). The Works of James Wilson. Vol. 2. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 586–589.[ISBN missing]
- ^ a b Finnis, John (2011). Natural Law & Natural Rights. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 23–58.
- ^ Introduction of the Bill of Rights in Congress, 1789 Jun 8, 21 Jul, 13, 18–19 August; Annals 1:424–450, 661–665, 707–717, 757–759, 766.
- ^ Harvey, Ray Forrest (1937). Jean Jacques Burlamaqui: A Liberal Tradition in American Constitutionalism. Chapel Hill, NC. p. 120.
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- ^ Reid, John Phillip (1987). Constitutional History of the American Revolution: The Authority To Tax. Madison, Wis. pp. 135–136.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Reid, John Phillip (1986). Constitutional History of the American Revolution: The Authority of Rights. Madison, Wis. pp. 132–133.
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- ^ Zuckert, Michael P. (1996). The Natural Rights Republic: Studies in the Foundation of the American Political Tradition. South Bend, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.[page needed][ISBN missing]
- ^ Zuckert, Michael P. (1998). Natural Rights and the New Republicanism. Princeton: Princeton University Press.[page needed][ISBN missing]
- ^ Zuckert, Michael P. (2002). Launching Liberalism: On Lockean Political Philosophy. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.[page needed][ISBN missing]
- ^ Kunze, Fred. "A Biography of John Locke". American History from revolution to reconstruction and beyond. GMW – University of Groningen. Archived from the original on 14 February 2019. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
- ^ John Locke, Two Treatises of Government – Of Civil Government, Bk.2, Chap 2, "On The State of Nature", §4,6,14, Chap 5, "Of Property", §26 (London : Whitmore & Fenn) 1821 pp. 189, 191, 199, 209.
- ^ Haworth, Alan (2014). Understanding the Political Philosophers From Ancient to Modern Times. Taylor and Francis.[ISBN missing]
- ^ Locke, John (1999). Two Treaties of Government. Cambridge University Press.
- ^ Connolly, Jacob. "John Locke". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Archived from the original on 27 February 2022. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
- ^ Broers, Adalei (2009). "John Locke on Equality, Toleration, and the Atheist Exception". Inquiries Journal. 1 (12). Archived from the original on 3 May 2021. Retrieved 26 May 2021.
- ^ Tuckness, Alex (2020). "Locke's Political Philosophy". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. Archived from the original on 5 September 2018. Retrieved 26 May 2021.
- ^ "Thomas Paine's Rights of Man". bl.uk. Archived from the original on 27 November 2020. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
- ^ Goodway, David (2004). "A cult of sensations: John Cowper Powys,s life philosophy and individualist anarchism". Powys Journal. 14: 45–80. JSTOR 26106709.
- ^ Tucker, Instead of a Book, p. 350
- ^ a b c "Literature of Liberty, Autumn 1981, vol. 4, No. 3 – Online Library of Liberty". Oll.libertyfund.org. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
- ^ Fromm, Eric (1973), The Revolution of Hope: Toward a Humanized Technology, New York: Bantam.[page needed][ISBN missing]
- ^ "Individual Rights" – Ayn Rand Lexicon. Archived 1 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
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- ^ "Man and Society". The Market for Liberty. p. 11.[ISBN missing]
- ^ Block, Walter (Spring 2003). "A Libertarian Theory of Inalienability" (PDF). Journal of Libertarian Studies. 17 (2). Mises Institute: 39–85. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 July 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
- ^ Rothbard, Murray N. (9 February 2007). "A Crusoe Social Philosophy". Mises Institute. Archived from the original on 17 November 2014. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
- ^ Kinsella, N. Stephan (Winter 1998–1999). "Inalienability and Punishment: A Reply to George Smith" (PDF). Journal of Libertarian Studies. 14 (1). Archived (PDF) from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 10 March 2017 – via Mises Institute.
- ^ "De Sciuridae et Homo Sapiens: The Origin of Rights and Duties" (PDF). Bu.edu. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 November 2013. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
- ^ "Catechism of the Catholic Church – IntraText". vatican.va. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
- ^ "Catholic Encyclopedia: Natural Law". newadvent.org. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
Further reading
[edit]- Ellerman, David, Neo-Abolitionism: Abolishing Human Rentals in Favor of Workplace Democracy, SpringerNature, 2021 ISBN 978-3-030-62676-1
- Grotius, Hugo, The Rights Of War And Peace: Three Volume Set, 1625
- Haakonssen, Knud, Grotius, Pufendorf and Modern Natural Law, 1999 [ISBN missing]
- Hutcheson, Francis. A System of Moral Philosophy. 1755, London.
- Locke, John. Two Treatises of Government. 1690 (primarily the second treatise)
- Lloyd Thomas, D.A. Locke on Government. 1995, Routledge. ISBN 0415095336
- Miller, Fred (2008). "Rights, Natural". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Cato Institute. pp. 434–436. ISBN 978-1412965804.
- Pufendorf, Baron Samuel von, Law of Nature and Nations, 1625
- Rasmussen, Douglas B. (2008). "Rights, Theory of". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Cato Institute. pp. 436–438. ISBN 978-1412965804.
- Siedentop, Larry, Inventing the Individual: The Origins of Western Liberalism, Belknap Press, 2014. [ISBN missing]
- Tierney, Brian, The Idea of Natural Rights, Eerdmans, 1997. [ISBN missing]
- Tuck, Richard, Natural Rights Theories: Their Origin and Development, 1982 [ISBN missing]
- Waldron, Jeremy [ed.] Theories of Rights 1984, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-875063-3
External links
[edit]- The U.S. Declaration of Independence and Natural Rights from Constitutional Rights Foundation