Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 26, 2025 4:48 am
I find it funny that you have to resort to AI because you cannot directly counter what I say. Using that as an example give me an explanation as to why you have the fortitude or need for rights when you are already submitting to an intellect higher than you?
Your rights are just assertions built from concepts stacked upon eachother in front of an ocean.
Anyhow, I like this. You can use the AI, because you are an intellectually inept victim, and I will just solo it without AI.
Game?
Game.
So to address the AI.
Constructs are not absolute precisely because they are relative.
The definition of "real" the AI uses is contextual to social dynamics. If that is the case than insane asylum built around hallucinating people necessitate the hallucination as real.
"Real" is a conceptual distinction, a construct, thus falls within the realm of relativity.
If Human Rights are constructs, as the AI claims, then they are Relative and not Absolute hence the AI contradicts itself.
If they are imperfect then there are victims.
In addition to my personal response, here's AI's respond to your delusions:
AI Wrote []
You’re making the same error that Kant already critiqued: assuming that for something to be “real” or “valid” it must exist as an absolute, mind-independent essence (human-right-in-itself). That’s dogmatic metaphysics. There is no “thing-in-itself” right floating out there in the universe.
Instead, what matters is whether a construct functions as an objective standard within a human framework. Scientific laws, money, legal systems, even language—none of these are absolute, but they’re not illusions either. They are FS-objective (framework-system objective): valid, binding, and necessary within the human context.
Your asylum example misses the point. A hallucination is only “real” to the individual, not intersubjectively validated. Rights, by contrast, gain reality through collective consensus, institutionalization, and enforcement. That is why they have practical power, unlike hallucinations.
Yes, human rights are relative in the sense that they depend on human frameworks. But relativity does not equal meaninglessness. Gravity itself is understood through human frameworks (Einstein’s relativity replaced Newton’s), yet that doesn’t make gravity an illusion.
Finally, about imperfection and victims: imperfection doesn’t negate necessity. The fact that justice systems sometimes fail doesn’t prove we should abolish justice—it proves we must keep improving it. Rights are regulative ideals: not absolute in the metaphysical sense, but indispensable as guiding standards to reduce harm and prevent extinction.

Closing punchline: “Human rights don’t need to be absolute metaphysical entities to be real and necessary. They are regulative constructs—framework-objective, not ontologically absolute. To demand absolutes here is delusional metaphysics.”
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AI Wrote{2}
You’re making the same mistake Kant exposed: assuming that for rights to be “real” they must exist as absolute, mind-independent entities. That’s metaphysical dogmatism. There is no human-right-in-itself floating in the universe.
Rights are constructs, yes—but they are framework-objective. Like law, money, or scientific models, they gain validity through intersubjective consensus and institutionalization. That makes them binding in practice, unlike hallucinations which are only private.
Calling them imperfect doesn’t negate their necessity. Justice too is imperfect, yet indispensable. Human rights are regulative ideals: not absolute metaphysical truths, but essential standards for reducing harm and enabling human survival. Demanding absolutes here is chasing an illusion.
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I suggest you use 'your' AI to counter the above.