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02-04-2003, 08:21 AM | #21 |
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But if I'm wrong, if a god could give you rights, I'll bet I could give you rights the same way.
okay ill bite. I bet you can't. Almost all objective morality arguments are based no a belief in some kind of god. From Plato to Locke. How can YOU give us rights? Ill assume you meant you could give us an argument for it, but still how can morality be objective if it was nt decided by a higher intelligence? Locke was one of the first to create the idea of the capitalistic, bourgoise society. sounds like he deserves insults to me. He was also one of the constitutionalists, and his idea that man has a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness (as long as it doesn't infringe on anyone else's) is the basis of the US constitution. Its been a while since I read Locke, but it "pursuit of happiness" was NOT one of his natural rights. His was "property" (just a small error) His argument is based from God, merely because during his time period very few people did, and he is a man of his time. well as I indicate above, I disagre. I think his idea of natural rights is inseperable from his view of God. He did not write a "rights theory" and then decide to throw God into it so people would like him. His theory was based on a God. |
02-04-2003, 11:39 AM | #22 |
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Abe Smith: I didn't write the first bolded print, so I won't begin to argue that, as my thoughts are still unsettled on the matter.
Yeah, Locke was for property, and that was one of his main points. As one of the benefitters of the type of society he created though, I'm quite thankful for it. So yay for bourgoise, boo for any other system...until I lose some money of course! I think pursuit of happiness was part in parcel with his idea that men have the right to life. And property. Since God gave those rights, we're essentially his property (that really stuck in my throat, I was pissed) and I guess, we're supposed to live. For those who don't feel like it, I guess that trying to pursue happiness would lessen that or something, so they'll continue to live. I might have mixed that up with liberty, which is sad, because I'm reading it right now. His entire thing for natural rights is based off of God. I agree. But that isn't because he's stupid, but because he was a man of his time. People back then didn't really question such a thing, and since we don't have the scientific theories to back up the statements now, I can understand. That was what I was trying to say. Sorry for being unclear. |
02-04-2003, 12:27 PM | #23 | |
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02-04-2003, 02:04 PM | #24 |
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Ahhhh Bullshit.
You don't have any rights. Invoke your right to life when a bullet is speeding at your head. It won't work, I suggest ducking. The right to happiness? That is an illusion. You can be tortured in a dungeon and hacked to pieces slowly, and if you have the mental faculties, you can convince yourself you are happy. Or you could live the life of Hugh Hefner and be a miserable prick. And the right to liberty? You kind of have it, but if you kill someone you will lose it, or if a sick fuck abducts you, you can't invoke the right, you better hope you have a good detective on the police force in your area. What we have is a social contract that include the rights that "we find to be self evident". What is self evident anyway? We don't have any proof that we have these rights, but they sound good so we'll call them self evident. If we stand together and say that we get along better socially if we have these rights, oh, and this list of ten other rights, and this constitution thingy over here should be thown in too, then we all have increased utility. We give rights to ourselves, Locke was using "god" because it was the easy way to lend authority to said rights. An authority that neither exists nor granted any rights if it did. |
02-04-2003, 03:27 PM | #25 | |
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02-04-2003, 04:02 PM | #26 |
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Just to clear up a possible misunderstanding, natural rights needn't be absolute or inalienable, and knowing about them needn't be a matter of self-evident moral intuition. A lot of theorists have characterized natural rights this way, but you don't have to.
Natural rights are just rights that people enjoy merely on account of being the type of beings we are. They're supposed to stand in contrast with conventional rights, the kind granted by legal systems and other human conventions. Anyone who takes this post as intended to support natural rights is an idiot. |
02-04-2003, 04:11 PM | #27 |
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Oh, and also, it's not clear that Locke believes God gave men their natural rights. He thinks that there is a Law of Nature, accessible by reason, saying that equal and independent beings (like us) ought to treat each other a certain way. Locke says that God made us equal and independent, so in that sense He gave us our natural rights. But Locke (I think) never says that God's will grounds the Law of Nature. In short, I think an atheist could follow Locke by saying that evolution made us equal and independent beings, and that consequently the Law of Nature applies to us.
After all, it really doesn't make much sense to say God gave someone his rights, as if moral truths can be willed true by God. Morality, whatever it is, isn't determined by the likes and dislikes of some spirit. |
02-04-2003, 05:18 PM | #28 |
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By Harumi
Locke was one of the first to create the idea of the capitalistic, bourgoise society. He was the first to write about the right to private property, hence, the economics part of it. He was also one of the constitutionalists, and his idea that man has a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness (as long as it doesn't infringe on anyone else's) is the basis of the US constitution. He was also the first to create the idea that the government be entrusted to protect our rights. Other than the God part, I rather like his philosophy. His argument is based from God, merely because during his time period very few people did, and he is a man of his time. But I'm not here to talk about Locke. I'm here to discuss whether or not humans have so-called 'natural rights'. Leave off insulting Locke. My reply : Well ... I guess it is out of my league here. In my country (hell ... in my side of the hemisphere), there weren't any (which I know of) constitutions or anything like that made by a person who is dead for about 300 years which we are required to follow. We do learn about principles and concepts of our forefathers as basis of our thoughts (but that is all there is) but we don't force it down on our children's throats either, then turn around and blame God when we succeed in choking our kids. You have the floor, Ms Harumi (your name sounded like that of a Japanese lady ... or is it Mr.?), sorry for the insult and sorry for barging in. |
02-04-2003, 05:27 PM | #29 | |
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Im pretty sure of this, though it has been a little while since I read him. |
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02-05-2003, 02:06 PM | #30 | ||
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I can't find any thing in the Second Treatise suggesting that God's existence grounds man's right to his own labor (which, I take it, is different from the classical economist's view that the market price of a commodity is determined by the amount of labor expended in its production). |
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