| It
started as a lecture. Then an article. The article grew into two
chapters, and finally a book—which was so long the publisher
split it into two volumes. Clearly William Talbott has plenty to
say about human rights.
The first of his two
volumes on the subject is Which Rights Should Be Universal?,
published by Oxford University Press this year. Talbott, professor
of philosophy,
references earlier philosophers and historical movements to address
this complex, politically charged question.
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Bill
Talbott. Photo by Nancy Joseph. |
Talbott’s bottom
line? There are some rights that should be universal, regardless
of national, religious, or cultural differences.
“My book is a
way of explaining why human rights should be understood expansively,
not narrowly,” says Talbott. “That puts me in disagreement
with many people. But that’s okay. Philosophy is disagreement.”
Talbott distinguishes
his view from two popular views of human rights. One, the moral
minimum conception, holds that the human rights are the rights that
are so important that international intervention is warranted when
they are violated. The other, the overlapping consensus conception,
focuses on seeking consensus, with the idea that different cultures
have different mores and those differences must be respected.
Talbott takes issue
with both positions. The first, he says, fails to recognize that
there are other ways to promote rights than by forcible intervention.
The use of forcible intervention is reminiscent of the moral imperialism
of the European colonists, with one group forcing its views on all.
The second conception,
the overlapping consensus conception, is a version of moral relativism.
“When you ask, ‘Who am I to make a judgment about another
culture?’ you are moving toward moral relativism,” says
Talbott. “This is an attractive idea, but ultimately it is
too wishy-washy. My goal is to work out a position between moral
imperialism and moral relativism.”
To make his case, Talbott
first takes an historical view. “Human rights had to be discovered
by a long process of trial and error,” he says. “It
was long thought that the best government for human beings was a
benevolent dictator who would decide what was best for everyone.
Plato was the defender of this kind of paternalistic government.
It took thousands of years to find out that paternalistic governments
don’t do a very good job of promoting the well being of their
people.”
Talbott’s position,
which builds on philosopher John Stuart Mill’s concept of
an experimental society, is that citizens should be able to use
their judgment to decide what is good for them rather than having
all decisions dictated. To enable people to make reliable judgments,
governments should protect certain basic rights, including freedom
of expression, freedom of association, and freedom of the press.
“It is a way of
designing a government that gets reliable feedback from its members
about how it is doing and is responsive to that feedback,”
says Talbott. “It promotes well being not top down but bottom
up, by allowing people to experiment and see what makes a ‘good
life.’ It is a society that will make itself more just over
time.”
This idea—that
the goal of basic human
rights is to provide a framework within which societies will tend
to become more just over time, even though no one has a definition
or complete understanding of what justice is—is emphasized
throughout the book. Talbott points out, for example, that an important
part of
any constitution is the ability to amend it, because “every
tradition is a rights violating tradition. No tradition has gotten
it totally right. There is always room for improvement.”
Talbott makes his point
through the example of women’s rights, which he considers
“a microcosm for the development of human rights.”
While men were developing
theories of rights in the eighteenth century, says Talbott, author
Mary Wollstonecraft was pointing out how the men’s grievances
against paternalistic tyrants were the same grievances women had
against men. “She was not criticizing the opponents of rights
but rather the advocates of rights,” says Talbott. “She
showed that they had a blind spot. And she was ridiculed. It should
give one real humility. These were the people who were making important
contributions to human moral development and they still had blind
spots.”
Usually that blind spot
comes down to some manifestation of paternalism. “Each time
you have a group being oppressed, the justification is that they
are like children who need a stern parent,” says Talbott.
“But that is a mistake. Good parents educate their children
so they can grow up to make their own decisions.”
Talbott recognizes that
philosophers will have objections to some of his
arguments. His second volume, Human Rights and Human Well-Being,
will address those objections and further develop his argument.
[Summer 2005 - Table of Contents]
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