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Nihilism's conscience: Grounding human rights after Darwin, Marx, and Nietzsche

机译:虚无主义的良心:在达尔文,马克思和尼采之后立足人权

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摘要

The idea of human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other key documents of international law today faces grave theoretical as well as political challenges from many fronts. In the light of ongoing debates about the sources and meanings of "rights" I seek to answer the question: Can we have the right (or rights) without the good, that is, without "thick" moral foundations? In a pluralistic world that knows the perils of religiously motivated violence and intolerance all too well, is the only alternative to fundamentalist zealotry (or philosophical dogmatism) some form of ungrounded moral relativism, emotivism, or pragmatism? Or is it in fact impossible to have a robust, persuasive, and sustainable account of human dignity, equality, and rights without appealing to essentially religious or metaphysical understandings of personhood? In this dissertation I focus in particular on the challenge of post-Enlightenment skepticism for the idea of human rights through a critical examination of three nineteenth-century thinkers who perhaps more than anyone else set the stage for our contemporary discontent: Darwin, Marx, and Nietzsche. All three provided vital insights into social realities that cannot be ignored yet their theories also pose grave problems for rights advocates. In response to the philosophical materialisms of Darwin, Marx, and Nietzsche, I seek to trace a broadly ecumenical, self-reflexive, and non-dogmatic approach to rights that at the same time builds on particularist religious understandings. We cannot have a rationally coherent and normatively compelling political ethic or discourse of human rights, I argue, without a metaethics that either implicitly or explicitly finds its moorings in essentially religious or metaphysical ways of thinking.
机译:今天,《世界人权宣言》和其他国际法重要文件所载的人权观念面临着许多方面的严峻的理论和政治挑战。鉴于有关“权利”的来源和含义的争论不断,我试图回答这个问题:如果没有善良,也就是没有“厚实的”道德基础,我们是否拥有权利(或权利)?在一个非常了解宗教动机的暴力和不容忍的危险的多元化世界中,是原教旨主义狂热主义(或哲学教条主义)的唯一替代品是某种形式的毫无根据的道德相对论,情感主义或实用主义吗?或者,实际上,如果不诉诸对人格的本质上宗教或形而上的理解,就不可能对人的尊严,平等和权利作出有力,有说服力和可持续的解释?在这篇论文中,我通过对十九世纪三位思想家的批判性考察,特别关注启蒙运动后怀疑主义对人权观念的挑战,这些思想家也许为我们当代的不满奠定了舞台:达尔文,马克思和尼采。这三者都提供了对社会现实不可或缺的重要见解,但它们的理论也给维权人士带来了严重的问题。为了回应达尔文,马克思和尼采的哲学唯物主义,我试图寻找一种广泛的,普世的,自我反省的,非教条主义的权利方法,同时建立在对特定主义宗教理解的基础上。我认为,如果没有一种元伦理学能够以本质上是宗教或形而上学的方式隐性或显式地发现其停泊之处,我认为,我们不可能拥有一个理性连贯和规范性令人信服的政治伦理或人权话语。

著录项

  • 作者

    Osborn, Ronald Elliott.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Southern California.;

  • 授予单位 University of Southern California.;
  • 学科 Political science.;Religion.;Philosophy.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2012
  • 页码 265 p.
  • 总页数 265
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:43:53

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