Description
Book SynopsisRe-thinking Rights: Historical Development and Philosophical Justification takes a new look at the history of individual rights, focussing on the way that philosophers have written that history. The scholastics and early modern writers used the notion of natural rights to debate the big moral and political questions of the day, such as the treatment of Indigenous Americans under Spanish rule. John Locke put natural rights at the centre of liberal political thought. But as the idea grew in strength and influence, empiricist and positivist philosophers punctured it with attacks on logical incompetence and illegitimate appeals to theology and metaphysics. Philosophers then turned to law and jurisprudence for the philosophical analysis of rights, where it has largely stayed ever since. Eleanor Curran argues that the dominance of the Hohfeldian analysis of (legal) rights has restricted our understanding of moral and political rights and led to distorted readings of historical writers on
Trade Review
Eleanor Curran is one of the premier theorists of the history of philosophy of individual rights, beginning with rights in the seminal thought of Thomas Hobbes. In her new book, which elucidates conceptions of natural rights from scholastic and early modern conceptions through empiricist and positivist attacks on those, Curran persuasively argues that we should reject the dominant Hohfeldian conception of rights as legal claims in favor of a novel way of justifying universal moral and political rights that separates them from most legal rights. Her argument that doing so provides a superior path for justifying universal moral and political rights is one that no serious theorist of rights can afford to ignore.
-- Sharon Anne Lloyd, University of Southern California
Table of ContentsPart I: The History of Rights Theory
Chapter 1. The Beginning: The Rise of the Idea of Natural Rights
Chapter 2. The Philosophical Discrediting of Natural Law and Natural Rights
Chapter 3. Does Hobbes Rather than Locke Provide a Forerunner to Modern Theories of Rights?
Chapter 4. The Jurisprudential Turn in Rights Theorising
Chapter 5. Reading Historical Writing on Rights: The Distorting Influence of Hohfeld
Part II: Current and Future Rights Theory: Assessing the Philosophy of Rights
Chapter 6. The Continuing Dominance of Hohfeld
Chapter 7. Current Theories of Rights: The Will and Interest Theories and Theories of Human Rights
Chapter 8. Thoughts for Future Rights Theorising