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Abstract

Implicit in the preceding discussion of evaluative problems has been the notion of a ‘right’. Underlying the arguments for equality, even in the minimal sense, is the proposition that individuals are entitled to respect as moral agents capable of choice, and that to use them for collective ends, as some critics maintain utilitarianism does, is to deny a basic right of equal liberty. Although it is true that some systems of political philosophy make no use of human rights, and indeed may openly reject them, they feature prominently in all discussions concerning the individual and the state. In contemporary Western political theory the dispute is more likely to be about the purported content of the various statements about rights than about the intelligibility of the concept of rights itself.

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© 1995 Norman P. Barry

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Barry, N.P. (1995). Human Rights. In: An Introduction to Modern Political Theory. Palgrave, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-24104-0_9

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