Rights. When do they apply?
When does an individual have Rights?
It can be argued that Rights come from the moment of birth. It can also be argued that a person need comprehension to know of his/her Rights, to understand them, to claim them, and to insist on those Rights being respected.
Why would birth be a deciding factor in inheriting Rights? Would not the formation of cells within a woman, once society determines she's not having a chicken, cow or kangaroo, have Rights?
When does a birthed child assume Rights? Where does a parents obligatory Right to all aspect of that child's life and well being end?
How does a newborn have Rights whereas 6 months prior he/she had none? Does dependency factor in? Perhaps a certain amount of self awareness, comprehension and understanding?
I fell into a conversation with another group about the female genital mutilation that recently happened and it raised some questions about Rights, society and family.
I'm curious what my friends here say on the matter.
I've recently read on the topic:
Second Treatise of Government by Locke
John Locke: Natural Rights to Life, Liberty and Property by Jim Powell
John Locke and the Natural Law and Natural Rights Tradition by Steven Forde (http://nlnrac.org)
It can be argued that Rights come from the moment of birth. It can also be argued that a person need comprehension to know of his/her Rights, to understand them, to claim them, and to insist on those Rights being respected.
Why would birth be a deciding factor in inheriting Rights? Would not the formation of cells within a woman, once society determines she's not having a chicken, cow or kangaroo, have Rights?
When does a birthed child assume Rights? Where does a parents obligatory Right to all aspect of that child's life and well being end?
How does a newborn have Rights whereas 6 months prior he/she had none? Does dependency factor in? Perhaps a certain amount of self awareness, comprehension and understanding?
I fell into a conversation with another group about the female genital mutilation that recently happened and it raised some questions about Rights, society and family.
I'm curious what my friends here say on the matter.
I've recently read on the topic:
Second Treatise of Government by Locke
John Locke: Natural Rights to Life, Liberty and Property by Jim Powell
John Locke and the Natural Law and Natural Rights Tradition by Steven Forde (http://nlnrac.org)
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More seriously, if a right is "a moral principle defining and sanctioning a man's freedom of action in a social context," then rights would not have any meaning in an environment that lacked a social context. You could not violate the rights of others (and vice versa) if there were no others to interact with.
But how does that extend to children? If rights are incontrovertible, then how can a child have rights over its parents?
Simply put, Children don't have the same rights as Adults, and DO have a claim over their parents for the "Right to Life" (which is a part of the right of Self Determination). Once society has determined that they are an adult, then their claim over their parents ends, and their full rights begin.
Rights do not conflict among humans; but assigning a right to a fetus would create a conflict.
Thus the mother's right is all that is relevant - cannot be compromised.
After birth, the mother/parents have to make decisions for the child as long as that child cannot make such decisions for himself. But that does not deny the child his separate rights; the parents must act to protect his rights.
It describes the belief that just because there is a word there must be an entity to which the word refers.
In this case the prefix 'un' means undo.
When there has not been an action, 'undo' has no meaning.
We recognize that everyone is born with these natural rights, even before they're able to exercise them. The nurturing period from birth to maturity serves to put the exercise of these rights into social context and hopefully minimize friction with other persons exercising their rights.
Several cases for examination:
1) a man is in an automobile accident and enters a comatose state. Is that man still a person legally and rationally?
2) a man is born with Down's Syndrome - an impairment in physical and mental ability which will result in his always having to be cared for. Is that man still a person legally and rationally?
3) a woman loses a child and enters a persistent hysterical psychological state. Is that woman still a person legally and rationally?
These are fairly straightforward cases, but it should be mentioned that Hitler argued that the Jews were inferior - not quite human - and therefore did not have to be afforded the same rights as other Germans. Many politicians in the US prior to the US Civil War argued that Negroes were inferior and therefore did not qualify for the same protection under the law. My caution is that when we start allowing people to be the judges of other people, we are asking to repeat the same tragedies of the past.
(PS - I too, thought evw's comment to be rational. I didn't downvote him either.)
“When the people find that they can vote themselves money that will herald the end of the republic.” - Benjamin Franklin.
I believe there is an argument that the fetus uses his/her mind to comprehend its external reality while in the womb. Its reality being within the womb of course, but the fetus uses its senses of touch and hearing while in the womb. This was an interesting article I came across
https://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...
Regarding power of attorney for seniors incapable of making decisions for their own lives, there is an objective list of five functions that, if a senior fails on two of them, then that senior can be deemed incompetent to fully take care of himself/herself. The principles of identifying that is as objective as possible.
There are no intrinsic borders within that process, but there are ranges that must be objectively identified and defined for the purpose of law so that everyone knows what they are to some practical precision. The exact cut offs are optional within our context of knowledge, but must be set at something in order to define law and rules (e.g. old enough to own property or drive or decide when to go to be or, later, whether to come home at night). The key is that the process of identification is objective; the principles are neither intrinsic nor subjective.
In the case of abortion, I would argue that the personal ethical right is the same for the mother and the fetus. The fetus is unable to protect its own rights but it is impossible to delegate the protection of those rights without violating the rights of mothers and their means of avoiding full term pregnancies in any way. In my opinion, we need to concede that we will not ask our government to make the ethical decision and define a "legal" stage for their intervention.
If left up to me, I would set the time for government protection to occur at the cutting of the umbilical cord, while, on a personal ethical basis, still believing that the fetus had full rights at conception.
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