Book

TI:Which Rights Should Be Universal?
AU:Talbott, William J
PB:Oxford Univ Pr : Oxford, 2005
IB:0195173473
AB:In this book, Talbott builds on the work of John Rawls, Jurgen Habermas, J. S. Mill, Amartya Sen, and Henry Shue to explain how, over the course of history, human beings have learned how to adopt a distinctively moral point of view from which it is possible to make universal, though not infallible, judgments of right and wrong. He explains how this distinctively moral point of view has led to the discovery of the moral importance of nine basic rights. Undoubtedly, the most controversial issue raised by the claim of universal rights is the issue of moral relativism. How can the advocate of universal rights avoid being a moral imperialist? In this book, Talbott shows how to defend basic individual rights from a universal moral point of view that is neither imperialistic nor relativistic. (publisher, edited)
DE:ETHICS; INDIVIDUAL; MORALITY; RELATIVISM; RIGHTS; UNIVERSAL
LA:English
DT:Monograph
AN:2063273