Radiantshadow
Urban shaman
- MBTI
- Human
- Enneagram
- Human
(The idea is stolen from INTPforum.com and fragments of my own thoughts)
What rights do we deserve as human beings? Do we deserve anything aside from what we can earn ourselves? Are humans entitled to anything?
Personal thoughts:
1) In theory, humans have no intrinsic rights except the right to be human, which doesn't explain much given the massive amount of ambiguity in our behavior. Given one situation, there will always be a person disadvantaged somehow.
In practice, humans generally have the right to exert their influence in the direction deemed most profitable in their environment.
2) I don't think so; even as children, we "earn" affection and upbringing by our nature as a resource created by another human. We do not ask for the attachment, it is given to fulfill a sense of obligation and personal value instilled in the parent.
3) The right to exercise free will (I'd rather not turn this into a debate about free will vs. determinism if at all possible; my view is that being able to think about the same concept and have two people decide different things is a clear indication of the principle)
Because I generally fail at debating, I open the thread to whatever may come as long as it is related to the questions put forth above.
What rights do we deserve as human beings? Do we deserve anything aside from what we can earn ourselves? Are humans entitled to anything?
Personal thoughts:
1) In theory, humans have no intrinsic rights except the right to be human, which doesn't explain much given the massive amount of ambiguity in our behavior. Given one situation, there will always be a person disadvantaged somehow.
In practice, humans generally have the right to exert their influence in the direction deemed most profitable in their environment.
2) I don't think so; even as children, we "earn" affection and upbringing by our nature as a resource created by another human. We do not ask for the attachment, it is given to fulfill a sense of obligation and personal value instilled in the parent.
3) The right to exercise free will (I'd rather not turn this into a debate about free will vs. determinism if at all possible; my view is that being able to think about the same concept and have two people decide different things is a clear indication of the principle)
Because I generally fail at debating, I open the thread to whatever may come as long as it is related to the questions put forth above.