Difference between revisions of "What Are Rights?"

From Critiques Of Libertarianism
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
<!-- you can have any number of categories here -->
 +
[[Category:Mike Huben]]
 +
[[Category:Rights|025]]
 +
[[Category:Under Construction]]
 +
{{DES | des = Rights are a far more complex subject than we usually think.  Most people would be surprised at how much that their folk models of rights leave out.  Libertarians rely on such simple models because they can lead to the right ideological conclusions.  At least five fields consider rights: philosophy, law, economics, sociology, and anthropology.  A good model would be compatible with all five fields. | show=}}
 +
 
== Natural Rights ==
 
== Natural Rights ==
Let's get [[Natural Rights]] out of the way first.  Natural rights are exactly as knowable as invisible pink unicorns: anybody can fantasize them any way they want.  During the Enlightenment, when liberalism was invented, liberal natural rights were a propaganda tool used to undermine the equally fictitious natural rights of kings.  But even among liberals there was no agreement about whether slaveholding was a natural right or not, because natural rights are really just words.  Bentham famously dismissed the idea of natural rights as "nonsense on stilts".
+
Let's get [[Natural Rights]] out of the way first.  Natural rights are exactly as knowable as invisible pink unicorns: anybody can fantasize them any way they want.  During the Enlightenment, when liberalism was invented, liberal natural rights were a propaganda tool used to undermine the equally fictitious natural rights of kings.  But even among liberals there was no agreement about whether slaveholding was a natural right or not, because natural rights are really just words.  Bentham famously dismissed the idea of natural rights as "nonsense on stilts".  Unfortunately, most libertarians (including Nozick) start with this philosophical abomination rather than more factual alternatives.
  
 
For more on natural rights, see:
 
For more on natural rights, see:
 
* [[Natural Rights]]
 
* [[Natural Rights]]
 +
 +
== Rights Are Socially Constructed ==
 +
Both moral rights and enforced rights (see below for the distinction) are socially constructed through political, religious, or academic institutions that codify, promote, and sometimes enforce these ideas.  They have no positive existence outside of human ideas and practices.  This is why there is little uniformity in ideas of rights, except where pragmatic needs (such as competitiveness) lead to gross similarities.  This is why there are no "true" rights: every society will construct its own based on the interests of its members.  Philosophy of rights that doesn't start with the social construction of rights is making a basic [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category_mistake category mistake].
 +
 +
For more, see:
 +
* [[Rights Are Socially Constructed]]
 +
 
== Hohfeld's Classification Of Rights ==
 
== Hohfeld's Classification Of Rights ==
 +
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld created the standard legal classification of right, duty, privilege (meaning liberty), no-right, power, liability, immunity and disability in a 1913 article that he expanded into a book. Libertarians (and lay people in general) are usually ignorant of these important definitions.
 +
 +
For the sake of simplicity, we are only going to consider right (also known as claim right) and duty.  A right can be expressed as "R has a right against D to T".  For example, Anne has a right against everybody to use her car.  '''For every right, there is a correlative duty.'''  A duty can be expressed as "D has a duty to R to T".  For example, everybody has a duty to Anne to let her use her car.  You cannot have a right without creating a duty.
 +
 +
Libertarians sometimes give lip service to Hohfeld, but the general pattern is to conveniently forget that rights create duties.[[Robert Nozick]] does not index "duty" in [[Anarchy, State, and Utopia]], and indexes Hohfeld only to refer to a meaning of liberty.  [[David Boaz]] does not index "duty" or Hohfeld in [[Libertarianism: A Primer]].  [[The Encyclopedia Of Libertarianism]] does not index "duty", but erroneously discusses Hohfeld and duty briefly (without a citation) under Natural Rights: Hohfeld wrote about legally created rights, not natural rights.  [[Jan Narveson]] correctly uses rights and duties in [[The Libertarian Idea]], but doesn't credit Hohfeld or anybody else in the legal tradition.
 +
 +
For more on Hohfeld's classification see:
 +
* [[Hohfeld’s typology of rights]]
 +
 
== Moral Rights And Enforced Rights ==
 
== Moral Rights And Enforced Rights ==
 +
A moral right is a wish for a right with its correlative duty, but no enforcement.  An enforced right is a rights claim whose correlative duty is enforced by threat and/or coercion.  Legal rights are enforced rights.  Moral rights can coexist in contradictory, conflicting multitudes because they are only words and not enforced.  For example, both Anne and Bob can claim the same car.  There is no actual protection with moral rights, and natural rights are an example.  Enforced rights, on the other hand, can be resolved when they conflict.  Anne and Bob can not enforce exclusive rights to the same car without conflict.  That's why law is usually dominant and conflicting rights claims are brought to court to decide a winner.  An enforced right can be expressed as "R has a right against D to T and R tells E to enforce D's duty to R.  For example, Anne has a right against everybody to use her car and Anne tells the police to enforce everybody's duty to let her use her car.
 +
 +
Philosophical claims for moral rights generally suffer from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Is–ought_problem is–ought problem] and other gross fallacies.  The Humean solution is to simply admit that you desire the benefits of particular rights because reason is the slave of the passions.  The appeal to consequences is the best you can do, and indeed is the basis of democratic decision making as well as the method of individual decision making libertarians mean by [[rationality]].
 +
 +
From here on, I am only going to talk about enforced rights and duties.  When people talk about moral rights, it is usually because they want them converted to enforced rights.
 +
 
== A Positive Model Of Rights ==
 
== A Positive Model Of Rights ==
[[Image:rights.jpg|400px]]
+
{{:A Positive Model Of Rights}}
 +
 
 +
== Enforcement Is Necessary To Rights ==
 +
Many people think that "social agreement" can create rights. Social agreement is an important factor in keeping the costs of right low because there is no need to enforce rights among those in agreement.  But the problem is internal threats to rights (newcomers, defectors and schismatics) and external threats to rights (raids, wars, etc.)  Those people may not agree, and there is no alternative to threats of violent coercion to deter them.
 +
 
 +
There is no culture where social agreement has been sufficient to create rights.  Even extremely non-violent pacifist cultures such as the Mennonites are parasitic upon coercive governments to protect their rights.
 +
== Negative Duties Are Not Free ==
 +
Every right creates negative duties for all other people, which are often characterized as requiring only "restraint" by the others.  As [[Frederic Bastiat]] liked to point out in [[What Is Seen And Unseen]], that overlooks an opportunity cost (for that "restraint"): those other people could benefit from ignoring the duty created by a right.  Plenty of people have starved because of the opportunity cost of respecting property rights in land that they could have farmed themselves.
 
== Compound Rights ==
 
== Compound Rights ==
 +
Single rights are frequently not very useful.  For example, if you have a right to pick a tangerine then you might not have any recourse when somebody else picks the tangerine (unless you also have another right to exclude all others.)  There are institutions creating several sets of [http://critiques.us/index.php?title=Bundle_of_Rights bundles of rights] that are commonly useful in society.
 +
=== Property ===
 +
Property is a specific set of rights that are coercively enforced. See: [http://critiques.us/index.php?title=What_Is_Property%3F#What_are_the_component_rights_of_property.3F What are the component rights of property?]
 +
=== Contracts ===
 +
Contracts too have bundles of rights such as:
 +
* Rights to purchase a particular product or service
 +
* Rights to resell a product or service
 +
* Rights to be the only seller or buyer
 +
* Rights to delivery and timely payment
 +
* Rights to refunds or repairs
 +
and many others.  These rights can vary a great deal and can be explicit in the contract or implicit due to contract law.  Enforcement is ultimately through the courts, even if arbitration is specified, because the parties may not abide by the arbitration.
 
== Positive And Negative Rights? ==
 
== Positive And Negative Rights? ==
 
== Absolute Rights? ==
 
== Absolute Rights? ==
 
== Spheres Of Rights? ==
 
== Spheres Of Rights? ==
 +
== Inalienable Rights==
 +
Inalienable rights (also known as unalienable or inherent rights) were originally used in a natural rights context, as in the US Declaration of Independence.  As natural rights, they are imaginary.  As Enforced Rights, government (the Enforcer) makes the Threat Claims without requiring an Enforcement Claim or Fees from the RightHolder.
 +
== Collective Rights ==
 +
Libertarians ignore a lot of reality to sometimes claim that rights (especially property) are always individual.  That's nonsense, usually presented as "Government cannot own things because only individuals can own things": a quick way to "logically" define government as illegitimate.  But of course that ignores corporations, partnerships, joint ownership, marriage, governments and much more.  Collective rights are common in society and play important functions.
 +
== Individual and Human Rights ==
 +
[[Murray Rothbard]] and some other libertarians claim that individual (and human) rights are actually [[Property|property rights]].  Starting from a fantasy [[Natural Rights]] assumption of property , they build a silly argument.  Individual Rights are clearly not property rights because they do not have all the subsidiary rights typical of property.  This is a classic example of [[Greedy Reductionism|greedy reductionism]].
 +
== Notes ==
 +
==Related Articles==
 +
* [[A Positive Model Of Rights]]
 +
* [[What Is Property?]]
 +
{{Quotations|title=What Are Rights?|quotes=true}}

Latest revision as of 20:38, 17 January 2021