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Are There Inalienable Rights?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2009
Extract
In the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights a quite large number of things are said to be ‘human rights’ and though in that Declaration the term ‘inalienable’ is not used to describe the rights in question it has been so used by commentators—at least with respect to some of the rights enumerated. I shall forgo asking the prior question as to whether any such thing as a human right exists and ask simply whether any such thing as an inalienable right exists. My intention will be to show that it does not.
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1989
References
1 Nickel, James, ‘Are Human Rights Utopian?’, Philosophy and Public Affairs, 11, No. 3 (Summer 1982).Google Scholar
2 Nickel, , op. cit., 251.Google Scholar
3 Ibid., also 258. Nickel considers what he calls ‘the right not to be tortured’ an especially convincing case of an inalienable right.
4 Nickel, , op. cit., 251.Google Scholar
5 I have supported this contention in some detail in, ‘Philosophical Non-sense’, Metaphilosophy 5, No. 3 (07 1972), 238–243.Google Scholar
6 Moorehead, Alan, Darwin and the Beagle (New York: Harper & Row, 1969), 99.Google Scholar
7 See, for instance, Golding's, Martin P. searching discussion in ‘Justice and Rights: A Study in Relationship’, in justice and Health Care, (ed.) Shelp, D.. (Dordrecht: Reidel, 1981), 23–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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