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Justifying Ethics: Human Rights And Human Nature

✍ Scribed by Jan Górecki


Publisher
Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Leaves
172
Edition
1st Edition
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Human rights include individual rights against government oppression, such as the right to freedom of thought, religion, speech, assembly, and to a fair system of criminal justice. But even in this basic political sense, "human rights" means different things in different historical and cultural contexts and advocacy of such rights has frequently been viewed as subjective. Justifying Ethics offers a thorough critique of the most common attempts to formulate objective standards through appeals to human nature, religion, and reason. Gorecki opens his inquiry by considering the role of norm-making concepts in the history of ethical thought: how standards of rights were claimed to conform to human nature and reason or have been stipulated by an external authoritative source such as God or social contracts. He then shows how such justifications may be discounted on analytical or practical grounds using such examples as divine will, Kantian reason, and the truth value of moral judgments. With respect to empirically grounded appeals to human nature, Gorecki argues against the notion that the innate plasticity of human behavior and potential for social diversity is sufficient grounds for human rights activity without objective justification. The search for justification remains essential in enhancing the persuasiveness of ethical action that aims at the moral "contagion" of the people by the human rights experience and the transition from moral acceptance to legal implementation.Broad in intellectual scope, Justifying Ethics draws upon moral and political philosophy, social policy, psychology, history, jurisprudence, and international law to clarify the prerequisites for the success of human rights activity. The book will be of special interest to political theorists, philosophers, sociologists, and human rights activists.

✦ Table of Contents


Introduction: The Power of Human Rights --
1. The Problem of Justification --
2. Human Nature. Universal Needs and Wants. Basic Ethical Inclinations: Universally Accepted Norms. The Function of Ethics --
3. Beyond Human Nature. The Divine Will. Reason. Cognitivism: The Truth Value of Moral Judgments. On the Road to Skepticism? --
4. Criticism: Human Nature as the Source of Hope. Human Genetic Program: Stanislaw Ossowski's Manichean Predilections. Individual Diversity: From Warsaw to Treblinka, 1942-43. Divergent Societies --
5. Countercriticism: The Human Rights Struggle and the Need for Justification. The Difficulties of the Human Rights Struggle: Contagion. The Difficulties of the Human Rights Struggle: From Moral to Legal Change --
6. Conclusion: The Importance of Justification. The Dilemma of Gustav Radbruch: Law, Positivism, and Genocide. The Importance of Justification.

✦ Subjects


Social Ethics, Human Rights


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