Ah, now we have hit on the fact that despite protestations otherwise, Kevin's ideas must be thrown out because they are fundamentally unsound. They suppose rights do not exist, but in constructing our model of social utility, rights again spring up, suggesting that fundamentally social utility and rights are intertwined concepts
This is simply woolly thinking. The concepts are intertwined in your head, so you conclude that nobody else is able to tease them apart.
It turns out in practise that it's socially beneficial to extend some privileges to all citizens without exceptions. You can call those privileges rights if you like. However even if you call them that, they are rights
only because they are socially beneficial.
The minute it turns out that a "right" does more harm than good to society when you take everything into account we should abolish that "right".
Once again, social utility is a construct, because society is nothing more than a way to describe multiple individuals. Therefore social utility cannot trump individual rights, because society is a collection of individuals.
Since rights only exist in the first place if they further social utility, the idea that rights can trump social utility is an absurdity.
Social utility can only be measured as an aggregate of individual utility, thus the concept of social utility cannot trump the concept of individual utility.
Sure it can. The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the Libertarian.
Okay, see that strawman? You made him. Lets consider what I said.
I said assume two of Kevin's arguments are true. Let us take that social utility is the basis for laws, and that rights do not exist.
Together we just showed that despite the fact that social utility was used as the basis of laws, rights popped right back up as part of the system.
That strongly implies rights exist, neh? As you have conceded in your post here.
This is you doing
exactly the intellectual face-plant AvalonXQ accused you of.
You missed the point when AvalonXQ explained it so I'll make it even more obvious for you.
GreyICE: Magical Inalienable Transcendental Rights exist, by magic!
Kevin: No. Social utility exists, and for reasons of social utility it's convenient to give some legal privileges to all citizens.
GreyICE: But those legal privileges are the same as my Magical Inalienable Transcendental Rights, which exist by magic. How can you explain this, unless they really are magic? Therefore Magical Inalienable Transcendental Rights exist and are magic and you are just incapable of basic reasoning!
Since one of Kevin's premises is that rights do not exist, then his entire line of logic is flawed, neh? (You're the one doing logical syllogisms, lets assume that the case "If A, and If Not B" ends up with "If A then B." Logical system is pretty screwed, neh?).
So you've descended from this reasonably simple argument that I think almost anyone could grasp into making stuff that I said up and lying.
I think this may be the one time AvalonXQ and I have agreed about anything, but AvalonXQ is precisely on the money in this instance.
Feel free to put me on ignore too, if you put people on ignore whenever you get caught in a really basic logical error.
Where do these Magical Inalienable Transcendental Rights you believe in come from? How do you know what is a Magical Inalienable Transcendental Right and what is not? Did God tell you they exist, or was it a mystical revelation that came to you after hours of navel-gazing?