First, thanks for taking the time to respond. I enjoy good conversation.
Rights do not guarantee moral behavior. Although they may prevent some immoral behavior.
Quite right, I hope I didn't give the impression that they did, though I should point out, on the prevention side that rights and the punishments for violating them are a big part of prevention.
Freedom of speech does not guarantee that people will say nice things.
Property rights do not guarantee that people will not be selfish.
Freedom of religion does not guarantee that people will believe in God.
Regardless of your values. Respectfully.
Again, quite right, but I'm not certain why you decided to point this out?
You mean how would I know that I have rights?
No, that's not what I mean at all. If you were alone and there were no other people, the idea of rights would no sooner occur to you any more than the concept of marriage or words like team.
You seem to be taking the position that rights exist
a priori. Again, I don't think there is any evidence to support that claim. I think that our experiences shape our values, and when I say values, I mean that we learn what it is we wish to avoid. Starvation, violence, sickness, suffering, pain etc. All of these are learned though experience. That not to say you have to experience all of these states personally as humans have capacities for reason and empathy not to mention a decent grasp on how the world works such that we get phrases like, I don't need to be hit by a bus to know I don't want to be hit by a bus.
We are created with kidneys, but how do we know that we have kidneys if we never see kidneys?
You might not know, but your lack of knowledge would not mean you don't have them.
Again, quite right, but rights are conceptual abstract concepts and kidneys are organs with a specific and well understood purpose, not to mention that kidneys are real physical objects and rights are not. Respectfully, it's intellectually dishonest trying to compare the two, on purpose or by accident, attempt to make connections where none exist.
So again, rights exist only at the nexus of human interacting. They arise because humans have a well developed concept of justice and fairness which in themselves are built upon our values. Now if you want to argue that humans have an innate sense of justice and fairness, that I would be willing to concede. Justice and the innate sense of fairness give rise to rights in the presence of human social interaction. Without it, there is chaos.
Actually to assert a right is to assert an authority.
It is and I concede that asserting there exists an unseen authority is very cleaver. I myself as a child often thought that my misfortune was caused by my misdeeds. It has the benefit of self-reinforcement. However, I don't believe that as an adult and I wouldn't want to live in a world where the only meaningful constraint on peoples behavior was fear of punishment after death.
The Declaration of Independence declares the authority of the people to alter or abolish any form of government destructive to certain ends, among those ends being the securing of certain rights.
Agreed, but it only works when people can convince others it's an idea that has value. Otherwise, their just words.
Are such things easily dismissed from your perspective or are they something to be taken seriously?
I take things seriously that are supported by the preponderance of the evidence. Those things that can be said to be true because they are the best explanation at the time, at least until a better explanation comes forth. Now, how I act on my beliefs of the truth of a claim are in line with the consequences of that belief.
I mean suppose there were a commandment in the Bible somewhere such as, "Thou shalt not steal." It seems like you would dismiss it as inconsequential.
The proposition that a person should or should not do something (like stealing) has no more or less weight to me because it's in the Bible. I would evaluate the statement on it's own merits.
Now, in fairness to the Bible, a collection of subtexts written and edited over millennia or more, it deserves to be studied and understood for all of the practical knowledge it contains. I like to say, if I had thousands of years to write and edit a book, the book would likely appear, to any normal person, to have divine inspiration for all of the practical knowledge I could gather and document, and that's what I believe the Bible is, a book written over a very, very long time and collected into a single text. It's only in our modern age that editing the Bible can no longer take place because of printing and the fact that everyone has but to read the text or Google it. We can't fix it's mistakes without compromising it's power as more than just a book.
You might argue: Who's going to enforce it?
That's easy, the people of a society that see
value in living together where stealing is considered to be wrong. Violation of that rule results in some sort of punishment.
And suppose that not everything is written in the Bible somewhere? Do you argue: Church has nothing to do with God because to my knowledge Christ never said you should worship on Sundays?
I'd argue that Church is nothing more than a community of people who congregate to share their faith and community. When it becomes more than that, I think it runs contrary to to the teachings of Christianity.
What's a little bit of murder and stealing between friends? /s
I hope this is just an attempt at sarcasm or levity.
Nothing to do with God, if you can't quote it from scripture, eh? I guess we can chalk it up to Divine Oversight.
Not at all, the point is that you are forced to admit, from your perspective, that there are a plethora of rights that do not come from god. They are created, from my perspective, just like every other right. As a social contract between the majority of people (in a free society).
And if we can have the right to remain silent, why can't all of the other rights originate the exact same way, as an expression of a need to enforce a shared value structure in society?
when the culture and values out of which the Constitution emerged was Christian
And yet most of the Christians in the world at the time the Constitution was created lived under oppressive theocracies or monarchies.
No, the Constitution was created by people who were largely Christian, but to say it was
because they were Christian ignores Centuries of evidence to the contrary.
(in the Declaration of Independence that people are "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights".
Yes, and I find it somewhat ironic that you can read past the glaring omission of that statement. It says "creator", not god. In fact, the word God, a being central to Christian faith, does not appear ONCE in the Constitution.
It seems the Founders wrote the Constitution in spite of their Christian heritage, not in support of it.
I'm reminded of a quote attributed to Madison: "The purpose of separation of church and state is to keep forever from these shores the ceaseless strife that has soaked the soil of Europe in blood for centuries."
Now, I don't know if he really said that, but regardless it's 100% correct.
Christianity has no special claim to cultural morality than any other religion.
In so far as "unalienable rights". That's a great quote and I hope that people believe it. But I find when people believe without knowledge of their beliefs, they are free to be persuaded to believe anything, be it the death of a race of people like the jews under Hitler, or the conquering of the middle east during the Crusades.
Respectfully,
EG