chewybrian wrote: ↑August 21st, 2021, 5:14 amLeontiskos wrote: ↑August 20th, 2021, 10:09 pm You are misapplying the word "right." If someone thinks morality doesn't exist they wouldn't go on to make claims on the basis of morality. If you don't think rights exist then you shouldn't simultaneously go on to make claims on the basis of rights, or to arbitrarily re-define "I want X" as "I have a right to X," at least if you're honest.I do believe in morality and I do believe in rights. But, I am only admitting that my beliefs are just beliefs. Other people have different notions of morality, like being able to treat women as virtual slaves instead of equals. Other people have different notions of rights, like the right to possibly infect others with deadly disease because they choose not to get a vaccination or wear a mask.
Morality and rights are not given to us on a stone tablet from God. Neither are they out there, waiting to be discovered, like math or science. They are worked out over time through our individual and collective opinions and our ability and willingness to protect our opinions.
chewybrian wrote: ↑August 21st, 2021, 5:04 amYet, I am not conceited enough to say that my opinions are objective facts.My point is quite simple. If someone says that they have a morality or a theory of rights, but doesn't think their theories establish any norms for general human behavior, then they don't actually have a theory of morality or rights. In that case they are just using words incorrectly.
You don't have to claim that your theory of rights is an objective fact or that it is infallible, but you do have to hold it as something that applies to and governs people other than yourself. If you are only concerned with your own behavior then you have no need to talk about rights. So now we have two conditions for rights, one from my last post and one from this post:
A. Rights-claims cannot be made on the basis of things like fiat, power, majority, opinion, or mere belief. Rights are the sort of things that exist independent of such considerations, and must be grounded in something deeper, such as justice or equity.
B. Rights-claims must be normative for people other than yourself.
Socrates: He's like that, Hippias, not refined. He's garbage, he cares about nothing but the truth.