I am not wrong since DoI is irrelevant to my rights.
Absolutely not. It's all about where your rights come from.
Do you think that rights just "are"?
I am not wrong since DoI is irrelevant to my rights.
Ok then, what relation does DoI have to where my rights come from?Absolutely not. It's all about where your rights come from.
Do you think that rights just "are"?
Ok then, what relation does DoI have to where my rights come from?
Just are what?
That's not what it says. "that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights".
Oops. Slip?
I'll return to your previous post:
This strengthens my argument that the Creator is God: Rights just...well, "are" in the sense that it's outside what man has created, and are endowed to us by their Creator.
If man hasn't created something, what has, if not God?
This leads us back to the "rights just are, existing outside anything"-argument. But what, in nature, indicates that we have the right to pursue happiness? That we are free? Ants have slaves. Is a flea "happy"?
Is it only humans that have these rights? If so, why?
Absolutely not. It's all about where your rights come from.
Do you think that rights just "are"?
Claus, you've agreed that the rights talked about in the DoI are contradicted by the USC. That suggests that there are at least two different sets of rights going on here.
What, in your mind, is the difference between the DoI rights and the USC rights?
None of that is relevant to the fact that the DoI neither endows anyone with any rights
nor claims to do so, unless you want to claim that it is to be interpreted that the writing of the DoI CAUSED this "Creator" to endow men with rights which is both inconsistant with the author's known beliefs and far from the most Occam-friendly reading of the document.
Why would Gram's (or any 21st century American's) view of rights necessarily be the same as Thomas Jefferson's. It might be but then again it might not be.
This is the thing that baffles me about the whole "DoI mentions God=American's are religious"argument.
By your logic 100 years from now the US could be composed 100% of atheists, but since our DoI mentions God, we would still be a religious country unless we invented a time machine and sent a killer robot into 1776 to stop Thomas Jefferson from inserting that word into the DoI.
The funny thing is, I don't even disagree that Americans are generally religious. I don't agree that the DoI is the root cause of that, and it sure the hell isn't a symptom. The use of the word "Creator" in the DoI speaks to the religiousity of people in 1776, it has squat to do with their attitudes towards religion or rights in 2006.
"The Black Knight always triumphs! I am invincible!"I'm amazed at the lengths to which people will go to avoid having to admit error. Sheesh. You're not being graded. You're allowed to miss a few.
I'm not saying that. You are a religious country because people are, by and large, religious.
My point exactly. It does, in fact, speak of the religiosity of 1776-Americans (or, if we are to be nitpicking, Colonials).
I can't remember if you've said it earlier, but do you think that rights just are? They just exist, regardless of deities and politicians?
Then why have you spent the last 30-odd pages arguing about the use of the word "Creator" in the DoI?
If you define "rights" as "those things that it would be considered immoral to forbid by law", my view of rights is that they stem from the mores of your society. I.e modern western society agrees that freedom of speech is generally a good thing and that it should not be limited without a compelling reason (i.e no yelling fire in a crowded thater), therefore that is a "right". a short, oversimplified explanation is that I beleive they DO exist independant of dieties and politicians because they are granted, in effect, by concensus.
Thomas Jefferson would, I am sure, disagree.
I'm not saying that. I'm saying that the DoI describes who/what endows the rights.
I'm not saying that either. I'm saying that the DoI describes who/what endows the rights.
"The Black Knight always triumphs! I am invincible!"
"You're a loony..."
I think I'm going to go watch that right now...![]()
Cute. Right here, Claus.
What about the rights mentioned in the DoI?
Are there any rights that cannot be denied you by society (or government)?
The rights mentioned in the DoI are broad vague concepts. It's like asking if I agree fuzzy animals are nice.
As for whether they can be denied, as I understand the definition of a 'right' a right cannot be denied by the society by definition, it would be contradictory since a right is something that comes from society in the first place. If it was denied by society it wouldn't be a right. Likewise, as I understand the definition of a right, it would be immoral of government to deny it as well, without some overriding reason, i.e government takes away my right to freddom of speech in saying I can't yell 'Fire!' in a crowded theater since my doing so could cause a panic that would deprive my fellow citizens of their right to live. But to take away my right to freedom of speech to say 'Bush is a weenie' would be wrong since ther is no compelling argument as to why that right should be taken away. So government can't take that right away from me in that sense.
You're welcome.Thank you.
I would say that only the rights that has any effect in real life whatsoever takes any precedence. As we have discussed, that would be the rights described in the USC.The difference between the DoI rights and the USC rights is that the DoI rights are unalienable endowed by a supernatural force, while the USC rights are social constructs.
What takes precedence in real life? USC rights?
No, but unalienability is not a requirement for rights, as far as I am aware.Is the right to carry arms an unalienable right?
Ah, but it may just still be relelvent, though you may not see it.If it is an irrelevant detail whether I have claimed that the DoI is a legal document or not, just what have you been on about for quite a while now? Do I need to tally just how many posts of yours that have dealt with this false claim of yours?
I thought we weren't going to keep asking questions that have already been answered? If not, I can go back and start dragging out a very long list that you have not satisfactorily answered as well. The last time I did that, you got quite upset.Are you going to produce your evidence that I have claimed that the DoI is a legal document or not?
I would say that only the rights that has any effect in real life whatsoever takes any precedence. As we have discussed, that would be the rights described in the USC.
What do you think takes precedence? The rights described in a 230+ year old letter to a dead king or the rights described in a legal document that is still in force today and is actually effects the daily lives of US citizens?
No, but unalienability is not a requirement for rights, as far as I am aware.
You see, if you do think that the DoI rights take precedence over the USC rights
, as I think you will
, then what you are doing is saying that a non-legal document carries more weight than a legal one. However, there are lots of non-legal documents that describe or merely discuss rights. If you are to decide that the DoI's rights take precedence over a legal document, we must also consider the precedence of other non-legal documents.
Of course, this is all dependant upon which set of rights you think takes precedence and why.
I thought we weren't going to keep asking questions that have already been answered? If not, I can go back and start dragging out a very long list that you have not satisfactorily answered as well. The last time I did that, you got quite upset.