Natural rights and Consequentialism. I identify myself as a consequentialist.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertarian#Natural_rights_and_consequentialism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libertarian#Natural_rights_and_consequentialism
Great post. It's making a lot of sense. Since they all seem based on survival, however, can you make a simple case for the right to life? Not talking abortion, thanks.
If there is no higher power to dictate to you laws, then everything you believe in is relative. You may think your natural rights are life, liberty, and property, but someone else may disagree.
Human reason is a higher power. Reason tells us we don't like certain things, so we should not do those to other. To continue living happily is the basic function of human life, so doing anything that would destroy this to others are wrong. Rights come from mutual agreements to not infringe on another person life.
Great post. It's making a lot of sense. Since they all seem based on survival, however, can you make a simple case for the right to life?
You can't prove natural rights exist any more than you can prove God exists.
You don't have to prove they exist. They are self-evident.
Maybe not, but if you dont believe in natural rights then where do your rights come from, the state? And if the state grants you your rights, they can surely take them away. Thats not a right but a privilege. There is something inherently unnatural about positivism, you are at the mercy of those in power, akin to a domesticated animal such as a Cow or a Sheep. Therefore even atheists would be wise to champion the natural law, lest they be slaves.You can't prove natural rights exist any more than you can prove God exists.
Excuse me, but why are you linking to an anti-scientific site like that?Science Against Evolution
Just try telling people that the existence of God is self-evident. Nothing is self-evident.