James Griffin’s Critical Approach Toward Human Rights in Relation to The Ottoman Practice

E. Gokcekuyu
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Abstract

James Griffin’s book “On Human Rights” is a critical account of the global leading imposition of human rights experience. Griffin provides a systematic outlook of the universality of human rights on basis of three key concepts: autonomy, liberty and a minimum provision. This article provides an analysis of Griffin’s critique and how the Ottoman practice of rights and duties overlaps and differs. According to Griffin Human Rights in the last fifty years has become a standing symbol of the Western global influence in promoting justice, fairness, political freedoms and equities as a human condition to be universally respected and acknowledged as an unalienable fundament. A condition that is formed through revolutions and major wars in the last couple of centuries so vigorous that gave birth to the need to protect the normative agent as is described by James Griffin. Griffin makes a philosophical case for the three concepts of autonomy, liberty and minimum provision. Upon further reading “On Human Rights” one encounters problems of practical nature that Griffin neither offers a clear explanation nor a functional framework for what he believes human rights ought to be. This book does however provide an invigorating debate on the question of how a discourse of rights can be uniquely different in virtue of distinct moral foundations. Griffin merely scrutinizes the arbitrariness of the universal declaration of human rights being based on concepts such as dignity instead of a universal shared moral theory. It is at this point that this paper perceives overlap between Griffins concepts of autonomy, liberty and minimum provision. The Ottoman practice and approach of individuals may not distinctly be labelled as human rights, yet does overlap with Griffin’s philosophical account of personhood.
从奥斯曼实践看詹姆斯·格里芬对人权的批判
詹姆斯·格里芬(James Griffin)的《论人权》(On Human Rights)一书对全球领先的人权强加经验进行了批判性描述。格里芬以自主、自由和最低限度规定这三个关键概念为基础,系统地阐述了人权的普遍性。本文分析了格里芬的批判,以及奥斯曼帝国的权利与义务实践是如何重叠和不同的。格里芬认为,在过去的50年里,人权已经成为西方在促进正义、公平、政治自由和平等方面的全球影响力的象征,作为一种人类条件,应得到普遍尊重和承认,这是一项不可剥夺的基本原则。在过去的几个世纪里,通过革命和主要战争形成了一种状况,这种状况如此强烈,以至于催生了保护规范主体的需求,正如詹姆斯·格里芬所描述的那样。格里芬从哲学角度阐述了自治、自由和最低供给这三个概念。在进一步阅读《论人权》时,我们会遇到一些实际问题,格里芬既没有提供一个明确的解释,也没有为他认为人权应该是什么提供一个功能框架。然而,这本书确实提供了一场令人振奋的辩论,讨论关于权利的论述如何能够凭借不同的道德基础而独特地不同。格里芬只是仔细审视了世界人权宣言的随意性,它基于尊严等概念,而不是普遍共享的道德理论。正是在这一点上,本文认为格里芬的自治、自由和最低供给概念之间存在重叠。奥斯曼帝国对个人的实践和方法可能不会被明确地贴上人权的标签,但确实与格里芬对人格的哲学描述重叠。
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