Sort of depends on whether you are doing a contractarian mash up of rights with responsibilities, in which case the classic argument is that animal rights are meaningless because tigers accept little responsibility for their actions. But rights for coma patients and fetuses hit the same bonfire.Harbal wrote: ↑Wed Dec 28, 2022 10:16 am I've said this before, but was ignored, so I'm saying it again:
To give rights to things that are incapable of understanding what rights are does not make sense. If we are concerned about the wellfare of an animal, we can place a responsibility on ourselves to treat that animal accordingly, but trying to give it a right is just stupid.
If you do a natural rights take on it, that hard link between a right and a concommitant responsibility is broken but you have a mess of finding these "rights" things in nature which doesn't really seem to contain any such thing. Optionally you can import natural responsibilities with natural rights, but only if you are choosing to have the coma and fetus problem.
Legal rights can go either way but the general gist is that wer just decide to extend rights to in groups because we have sympathy with them and we want to express that in the form of protections. The rights are contingent legal fictions, not a part of the world or some logical necessity. That way the Swiss can grant a legal right to personal dignity on behalf of house plants.
Everyone thinks they personally have a very sensible take on what rights are and how they ought to work. But a cursory examination reveals it is all kinda thrown together, unless you offload all the work onto God of course.