All rights exist only by law.
What do you mean when you say "rights" and what do you mean with "privileges", and what are the differences between the two?Rights are just that, rights. Privileges are given by law.
Contrary to popular belief, the Declaration of Independence was not a foundational document; it was a declaration of our independence from the colonial rule by the English Monarchy, and an act of war. (It was also, idealistically, a pretty piece of propaganda!) Likewise, it may come as a surprise (even a shock) for some to learn that Thomas Jefferson?s ideas about natural rights were not adopted by the framers of our Constitution. Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence: "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; that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the consent of the governed . . . ." The framework of our government, however, did not incorporate the ideals expressed by Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence. The intoxicating ideas of Rousseau and Locke that Jefferson so admired, and that inspired our revolution (and that of France as well), gave way to a more sober expression of our rights and freedoms in the Constitution and Bill of Rights. The framers of our Constitution created a nation of laws and not men; which represents a compromise between the rights of individuals and the power of the state. All men are not created equal - they are equal under the law; and the rights to "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness" are not unalienable, they are subject to law. In this compromise - this social contract that is our Constitution - rests the security for our individual rights and liberty.
Law may help secure certain rights, but these rights do not exist because of the law. Furthermore, even in an anarchy, certain rights would certainly exist- the right to life once one is born, the right to pursue happiness, or even something like the right to have sex and reproduce. Every species other than humans is currently living proof that certain rights would still exist without the law.No, the law is the only means by which real rights may be secured.
Well the "law" of the jungle is different than the law created by a state. Of course there is order in everything to an extent, and if you classify all that as law, then yes, you are correct. But, even without the "rule of law" man could survive and have rights- just as they surely did before the advent of civilization. You can claim they would in that circumstance live in the law of the jungle as well, and under that definition of the law, that claim might be justifiable. Even then though, there is a theory of physics that claims that the universe always increasing in entropy and if that is true, then even the "law" of the jungle may lose its order over time, but of course that brings us into a whole other topic.Gorillas and lions live in the natural world that is the subject to "the law of the jungle" - man lives in society which is subject to "the rule of law." Unto this last, there is not one right that is not subject to law. The right to life itself - even the very air we breathe - is subject to legal regulation. It cannot be otherwise. To say that rights exist independent of the law is - like the "chicken or the egg" dichotomy - fallacious, for the one cannot exist without the other. There are no absolute rights. All rights are subject to law that defines their limitation. To say that one has a right to anything can only be validated by law.
Well the "law" of the jungle is different than the law created by a state. Of course there is order in everything to an extent, and if you classify all that as law, then yes, you are correct. But, even without the "rule of law" man could survive and have rights- just as they surely did before the advent of civilization. You can claim they would in that circumstance live in the law of the jungle as well, and under that definition of the law, that claim might be justifiable. Even then though, there is a theory of physics that claims that the universe always increasing in entropy and if that is true, then even the "law" of the jungle may lose its order over time, but of course that brings us into a whole other topic.
It just came to mindmyp, did you really just try to turn this debate into a physics discussion? :giggle:
Really depends on one's view of the world, I guess. When you put it that way, then everything intangible thing is essentially a social construct- love, consciousness, thought, etc.Rights are a social construct. There are no natural rights. But so long as there are people, there will be the concept of rights.
I still see some rights even in a world without law though though- such as the right to reproduce. Sure one can take it away, but that does not mean it doesn't exist. The whole idea of Darwinism is on competition and even there, the right to compete exists.What rights? Beyond the law there is only savagery - where Kraft macht Recht ("might makes right") - that is the state of natural law. Natural rights are but cold comfort when they can be taken away with impunity.
You will learn for yourself the true nature and source of your rights when you have need to enforce them. You will find them ground in law. (Quoting John Locke will get you nowhere in court!) Even God-given rights are only good in heaven. In this world, one need have recourse to the law.
What rights? Beyond the law there is only savagery - where Kraft macht Recht ("might makes right") - that is the state of natural law. Natural rights are but cold comfort when they can be taken away with impunity.
You will learn for yourself the true nature and source of your rights when you have need to enforce them. You will find them ground in law.
Rights are a social construct. There are no natural rights. But so long as there are people, there will be the concept of rights.