Article contents
Rights as Religious or Secular: Why Not Both?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 September 2015
Extract
Michael Perry has written a nuanced, insightful, provocative, often sensible, frequently convincing, and ultimately perplexing book. I am not sure what his thesis is. Since he titles the book as a series of “inquiries,” perhaps he doesn't have a unified thesis, or need one. And as an extended set of ponderings over the complexities of defining and defending human rights, this book certainly “works.”
The book's apparent thesis is set out in the introduction and repeated frequently thereafter: that it is not possible to understand talk about human rights, such as that contained in the International Bill of Human Rights, in secular terms. Instead, “the idea of human rights is … ineliminably religious.” This is so because the idea of human rights requires affirming that each person is “sacred” in relation to a holistic view of the world and its meaning, so that there are certain things that should not be done to and that should be done for any person. The only sort of view of the world and of the person within it that can ground the idea of human rights is a religious view, Perry suggests; there is no secular equivalent.
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- Copyright © Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University 1999
References
1. Perry, Michael J., The Idea of Human Rights: Four Inquiries 13 (compare 25, 35) (Oxford U Press, 1998)Google Scholar.
2. Id at 13.
3. Perry, , The Idea of Human Rights at 29 (cited in note 1)Google Scholar.
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6. Id at 35.
7. Id at 63.
8. Id at 64.
9. See id at 86.
10. See id at 88, 95.
11. See id at 59.
12. The possibility of defending rights in a variety of traditions has substantial theological and historical support (see note 22 and accompanying text).
13. Perry, , The Idea of Human Rights at 13 (cited in note 1)Google Scholar.
14. See id at 20.
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19. According to Max L. Stackhouse, the chief and perhaps only contribution of recent sharp criticisms of Enlightenment “foundationalism” is that “it discloses the degree to which the Enlightenment failed to acknowledge how deeply theological its assumptions were …” Stackhouse also faults the Enlightenment for failing “to recognize that such theological assumptions were indispensable to the further development of the reason, progress, and respect for dignity that the Enlightenment rationalists advocated.” Stackhouse, Max L., The Intellectual Crisis of a Good Idea 26 J Rel Ethics 267 (1998)Google Scholar. However, Stackhouse does not seem to concur in Perry's suggestion that religion supplies to the idea of rights some indispensable grounding element not present in “secular” discourse, but rather be seen to view religion, as I have done, as part of a comprehensive cultural milieu, from which the “secular” cannot be easily extricated. In the same issue of the JRE, John Langan, S.J., offers no fewer than twelve models of the complementary relation between theological and human rights discourse. John Langan, S.J., Contrasting and Uniting Theology and Human Rights 26 J Rel Ethics 249–55 (1998)Google Scholar.
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24. See Slaughter, Anne-Marie, The Real New World Order 76 Foreign Affairs 183–97 (1997)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
25. Gudorf, Christine, Life Without Anchors: Sex, Exchange, and Human Rights in a Postmodern World 26 J Rel Ethics 300 (1998)Google Scholar.
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