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引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要:约翰-斯图亚特-密尔(John Stuart Mill)的 "伤害原则 "认为,只有在防止伤害他人的情况下才能限制个人的自由。然而,强伤害原则和狭伤害原则之间存在着重要的模糊性,前者将合法干预限制在自卫范围内,因此禁止社会保护第三方(非社会成员);后者则赋予任何社会普遍管辖权,以防止未经同意的伤害,无论伤害对象是谁。密尔有时诉诸强伤害原则来排除干涉,但在其他地方却赞同保护第三方的措施(包括人道主义对外干涉和虐待动物法),这表明他只赞同弱伤害原则。在社会有资格保护谁的问题上,这种模棱两可的态度对个人自由的范围有着重要的影响。
Harm to What Others? J. S. Mill's Ambivalence Regarding Third-Party Harm
abstract: John Stuart Mill's harm principle holds that an individual's freedom can only be restricted to prevent harm to others. However, there is an important ambiguity between a strong version, which limits legitimate interference to self-defense and therefore prohibits society from protecting third parties (those who are not its members), and a narrow version, which grants any society universal jurisdiction to prevent nonconsensual harms, no matter who is harmed. Mill sometimes appeals to the strong harm principle to preclude interference, but elsewhere endorses measures (including humanitarian foreign intervention and animal cruelty laws) to protect third parties, suggesting that he subscribes only to the weak harm principle. This ambiguity regarding who it is that society has standing to protect has important implications for the scope of individual freedom.
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