Kramer, Matthew H.

Rights and Right-Holding A Philosophical Investigation - Oxford Oxford University Press 2024 - 1 online resource

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Rights and Right-Holding presents a rigorous philosophical investigation of the two phenomena mentioned in its title. With a lengthy exposition of the analysis of legal and moral positions that was propounded in the early twentieth century by the American legal theorist Wesley Hohfeld, it plumbs the logical relationships among such positions, and it amplifies the Hohfeldian analysis by showing how logical quantification has to be incorporated into Hohfeld's schema. The volume then ponders the longstanding debates over the Interest Theory of right-holding versus the Will Theory of right-holding, as it champions the Interest Theory while undertaking some lengthy and innovative critiques of the Will Theory. Finally, it considers at length the ethical and analytical questions involved in ascertaining what sorts of beings are capable of holding claim-rights at all. In so doing, the book delves deeply into some foundational matters of moral and political philosophy even while it continues to engage with subtle points of logical quantification and analysis. It concludes that the beings capable of holding claim-rights include not only human adults of sound mind but also all other living human beings, many dead people, all future generations of people, and most non-human animals.


Open licence


eng

9780191996207 9780198891222

10.1093/oso/9780198891222.001.0001 doi


Ethics and moral philosophy
Jurisprudence and general issues
Law
Methods, theory and philosophy of law
Philosophy and Religion
Philosophy
Topics in philosophy

claim-rights disabilities duties Hohfeldian analysis immunities liabilities liberties logical quantification no-rights powers