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Historical Origins of Human Rights

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the prevalence of exclusionary worldviews in human societies in history ... ( 1891) 325 Centuries of de-humanizing celibacy. 1882 F. HARRISON Choice Bks. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Historical Origins of Human Rights


1
Historical Origins of Human Rights
  • Lecture 2
  • Origins of the Concept of Humanity
  • January 22, 2007

2
outline
  • universalism as a historical problem
  • how to think about it
  • Greek Origins?
  • E. Troeltsch Christianity and Stoicism
  • digression monotheism in general
  • Roman fusion
  • Ecce Homo
  • to be human is to be dignified
  • from humanization to dehumanization
  • an invention of recent date

3
ethical universalism as a historical problem
  • the prevalence of exclusionary worldviews in
    human societies in history
  • simple ethnocentrism the tribalistic view
  • complex ethnocentrism humans versus non-humans
  • compare ethical universalism the notion that
    humans, in virtue of being human, have dignity
    and value
  • the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
    inherent dignity of all members of the human
    family.
  • did ethical universalism have to be discovered
    (or invented)?

4
how to think about it
  • minimalist versus maximalist versions of unity
  • biological unity
  • formal versus substantive unity
  • humanness has dignity, a quasi-sacred value
  • when does the belief that biological unity
    implies some further content arise?
  • in particular, when does the idea that humanity
    confers dignity arise?

5
Hannah Arendt
  • a human being or homo in the original meaning
    of the word indicated someone outside the range
    of the law and the body politic of the citizens,
    as for instance a slave  but certainly a
    politically irrelevant being.

6
Greek origins?
  • Greeks versus barbarians 
  • Aristotle Affects also exists by nature between
    members of the same species, and especially among
    men and for this reason we praise those who love
    their fellow men. Even on our travels we can see
    how near and dear ever man is to every other
    (Nicomachean Ethics 1155a16-22).
  • Aristotle natural slavery

7
Greek origins? contd
  • Bruno Snell Euripides, in his Medea, is the
    first to portray a human being who excites pity
    by the mere fact of being a human being in
    torment as a barbarian she has no rights, but as
    a human she has.
  • philanthropia
  • Peloponnesian war
  • the Melian genocide
  • Stoicism

8
Troeltsch on the combination of Stoicism and
Christianity
  • Ernst Troeltsch (not important who he was) argued
    that the universalism of the natural law/natural
    right tradition arose from the fusion of Stoicism
    and Christianity
  • Christianity as a religion of the end-times that
    could by itself give rise to no this-worldly
    moral and political thought
  • hence Stoicism as vessel of Christian values

9
Stoic universalism
  • why physics ? theology ? anthropology 
  • nature is one, animated by a divine principle,
    humans are part of nature, aware of this
    principle through thought, therefore humanity is
    one
  • Marcus Aurelius If the power of thought is
    common to all, common also is reason, through
    which we are rational beings. If so, that reason
    is common which tells us what to do and what not
    to do. If so, law also common. If so, we are
    citizens. If so, we are fellow members of a
    community. If so, the universe is as it were a
    city. For of what other community can the whole
    human race be said to be fellow members?
  • Cicero, De finibus The mere fact of their
    common humanity requires that one man should feel
    another man to be akin to him.
  • Seneca

10
Israelite religion
  • tribalism
  • election
  • Adam and Noah as common ancestors
  • Noachide law (Talmud)
  • prophetic universalism
  • Jesus

11
Christianity
  • Christian universalism
  • There is no Jew or Greek, there is no longer
    male and female for all of you are one in Christ
    Jesus. And if you belong to Christ, then you are
    Abrahams offspring, heirs according to the
    promise (Galatians 3 28-9)
  • Troeltschs argument about why Christianity not
    enough on its own

12
christianity, contd
  • limits to the Christian story
  • physical cruelty body as devotional object
  • slavery (Hams curse)
  • holy war

13
compassion for suffering humanity
  • after year 1000, changes in Christian devotion
  • from Jesus as judge
  • to Jesus as sufferer
  • Anselm, Cur deus homo (Why God Became Man)
  • devotion to Mary as compassionate

14
ecce homo
  • The scourged and mocked Christ is shown wearing a
    crown of thorns and purple robe placed on him by
    the Roman soldiers. In many examples, his wrists
    are tied and a rope is knotted around his neck.
    Scourge marks are frequently emphasized, and his
    face expresses compassion toward his accusers. In
    the narrative versions, two guards are often
    shown supporting the suffering figure while
    Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor of Judea,
    gestures toward Christ, illustrating his words

15
antonello da messina (1473)
16
hieronymus bosch (1490)
17
titian (1543)
18
caravaggio (1600)
19
georg grosz (1924)
20
thinking about ecce homo
  • from literalism to symbolism
  • Jesus as symbolic of humanness in general?
  • nudity (cf. Joseph de Maistre I have seen in my
    time Frenchmen, Italians, Russians, etc. I even
    know, thanks to Montesquieu, that one may be a
    Persian but as for Man, I declare I never met
    him in my life if he exists, it is without my
    knowledge.
  • suffering
  • victim of politics
  • to be human is to be the representative of non-
    or suprapolitical values

21
to be human is to be dignified
  • the one single result of the Renaissance is
    enough to fill us with everlasting thankfulness.
    The logical notion of humanity was old enough
     but there the notion became a fact. (Jacob
    Burckhardt, The Civilization of the Renaissance
    in Italy)
  • Pico della Mirandola, Oration on the Dignity of
    Man (1486)
  • Christian perfectionism
  • Immanuel Kant, Groundwork of the Metaphysics of
    Morals (1785)

22
human dignity, contd
  • the formula of humanity
  • humanness not simply as a power (choice and
    freedom, the agency to set ends for oneself), but
    also both sacredness in worth and vulnerability
    to attack and violation
  • man is not a thing and hence is not something
    to be used merely as a means he must in all his
    actions always be regarded as an end in himself.
    Therefore, I cannot dispose of man by
    mutilating, damaging, or killing him (Kant, Ak.,
    429).

23
from humanization to de-humanization
  • dehumanize, v. trans. To deprive of human
    character or attributes.
  • 1818 MOORE Diary 4 Dec., Turner's face was a good
    deal de-humanised. 1889 Pall Mall G. 26 Nov. 1/2
    Our great towns de-humanize our children.
  • Hence dehumanized ppl. a. dehumanizing vbl. n.
    and ppl. a. also dehumanization.

24
from humanization to de-humanization, contd
  • Dehumanization 1844 N. Brit. Rev. II. 109 These
    almost de-humanized creatures. 1856 R. A. VAUGHAN
    Mystics IV. ii. note, The mystics..representing
    regeneration almost as a process of
    dehumanization. 1857 J. PULSFORD Quiet Hours 156
    It would seem as though the world's method of
    Education were dehumanizing. 1860 O. W. HOLMES
    Elsie V. xxii. (1891) 325 Centuries of
    de-humanizing celibacy. 1882 F. HARRISON Choice
    Bks. (1886) 446 To rehumanise the dehumanised
    members of society. 1889 G. GISSING Nether World
    III. i. 19 The last step in that process of
    dehumanisation which threatens idealists of his
    type.
  • similarly, the word-concepts of humane and
    humanitarian

25
an invention of recent date
  • Michel Foucault, The Order of Things (1966)
  • Humanity is an invention of recent date. And one
    perhaps nearing its end. If the arrangements
    that allowed it were to disappear as they
    appeared. . . one can certainly wager that
    humanity would be erased, like a face drawn in
    sand at the edge of the sea.
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