Thinking hardly or hardly thinking? Philosophy |
Major trains of thought |
The good, the bad, and the brain fart |
Come to think of it |
Human rights are those rights that all people have (or should have, or are believed to have) as humans.
Unfortunately, no consensus can be reached as to what constitutes human rights. Many non-Western countries have said that trying to impose Western concepts of human rights (such as freedom of religion or political rights) is an act of colonialism. Instead, many of them say that Western ideology does not give enough thought to rights such as clothing, stability, and work.
While almost every country in the world has signed onto the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, many of them do not live up to it.
To a large extent, human rights have become a political football in the field of international relations. In particular, the United States and China trade accusations of human rights abuses on a yearly basis.[1][2]
The concept of human rights emerged from Enlightenment-era thinkers' (and revolutionaries) ideas about "natural rights" and the "rights of man." This was mainly a reaction to absolutist monarchism, the divine right of kings, and religious oppression. The inviolability of the human body became a central concept in human rights, especially after Voltaire's campaign to overturn the verdict against Jean Calas, the French Calvinist framed for murder.[3][note 1]
While some states (notably Virginia) passed declarations of rights prior to 1789, the first attempt to pass a "canon" of human rights was made almost simultaneously in the US and France with the "Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen" of August 1789 and the (slightly later) American Bill of Rights (i.e. the first ten amendments to the US constitution) which became law by 1791 after being approved by Congress in September of 1789. To a large degree, all subsequent declarations of human rights (as well as many constitutions) draw significant inspiration from either or both of those declarations.[note 2]
Given that different cultures give differing weights to what is or is not a human right, the United Nations set forth to reach consensus and, in 1948 in the aftermath of World War II, proclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Of the 56 participating countries, there were no dissenters, although there were eight abstentions.
There are 30 'Articles',[4] although not each of these directly equates to a right. In brief — and heavily paraphrased — the rights are:
Naturally, this attempt to reach consensus has its critics. In brief, these can be summed up as
Furthermore, totalitarians, both on the right and on the left as well as their apologists, are opposed to pretty much every human right, listed or not. Anarchists, on the other hand, tend to be more divided on the subject, with some of them denouncing the failure of governments to uphold them and others believing that the concept of human rights has no objective reality behind it and ultimately serves to justify the state's power — and if the state can grant rights, it can then take them away whenever they please.[32]
Categories: [Culture] [Human rights] [Philosophy] [Rights]