Alan Gewirth’s claim that agents contradict that they are agents if they do not accept that the principle of generic consistency (PGC) is the supreme principle of practical rationality has been greeted with widespread scepticism. The aim of this article is not to defend this claim but to show that if the first and least controversial of the three stages of Gewirth’s argument for the PGC is sound, then agents must interpret and give effect to human rights in ways consistent with the PGC, or deny that human beings are equal in dignity and rights (which idea defines human rights) or that they are agents (and hence subject to any rules at all). Implications for the interpretation of the international legal system of human rights inspired by the...
The paper concerns the moral status of persons for the purposes of rights-holding and duty-bearing. ...
This article examines the traditional manner in which human rights implementation has been focused o...
This article argues that modern human rights practice is largely imbued with an understanding of mor...
Christine Korsgaard claims that Gewirth’s argument for morality fails to demonstrate that there is a...
This article explores Alan Gewirth’s argument for a secular foundation for the idea of human rights ...
This thesis seeks to engage with and give answers to the fundamental question of rights interpretati...
Followers of traditional modes of ethical thinking rightly approachpostmodern philosophical methodol...
This article contrasts two common cognitive approaches employed by United States (US) politicians in...
In this paper I examine the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. My analysis count...
The paper concerns the moral status of persons for the purposes of rights-holding and duty-bearing. ...
The United Kingdom Supreme Court’s 2014 decision in Cheshire West concerned the question of whether ...
In this paper, I argue that the contemporary human rights literature would benefit from a shift in f...
The concept of human rights, supposedly of universal importance, is usually derived from the traditi...
Using the accounts of Gewirth and Griffin as examples, the article criticises accounts of human righ...
© Jack Donnelly. All rights reserved. This article is forthcoming in Human Rights Quarterly. This pa...
The paper concerns the moral status of persons for the purposes of rights-holding and duty-bearing. ...
This article examines the traditional manner in which human rights implementation has been focused o...
This article argues that modern human rights practice is largely imbued with an understanding of mor...
Christine Korsgaard claims that Gewirth’s argument for morality fails to demonstrate that there is a...
This article explores Alan Gewirth’s argument for a secular foundation for the idea of human rights ...
This thesis seeks to engage with and give answers to the fundamental question of rights interpretati...
Followers of traditional modes of ethical thinking rightly approachpostmodern philosophical methodol...
This article contrasts two common cognitive approaches employed by United States (US) politicians in...
In this paper I examine the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. My analysis count...
The paper concerns the moral status of persons for the purposes of rights-holding and duty-bearing. ...
The United Kingdom Supreme Court’s 2014 decision in Cheshire West concerned the question of whether ...
In this paper, I argue that the contemporary human rights literature would benefit from a shift in f...
The concept of human rights, supposedly of universal importance, is usually derived from the traditi...
Using the accounts of Gewirth and Griffin as examples, the article criticises accounts of human righ...
© Jack Donnelly. All rights reserved. This article is forthcoming in Human Rights Quarterly. This pa...
The paper concerns the moral status of persons for the purposes of rights-holding and duty-bearing. ...
This article examines the traditional manner in which human rights implementation has been focused o...
This article argues that modern human rights practice is largely imbued with an understanding of mor...