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On Natural Rights, Speaking Prose All Our Livesi
By Hadley Arkes 424
On Natural Rights: Speaking Prose All Our Lives
By Hadley Arkes Bertrand Russell once had a joke about Mrs.
Christine Franklyn-Ladd, who was a solipsist: she professed not to
know that there was anyone in the world apart from herself. But she
was so disappointed that she couldn't find others to come to
meetings. And Immanuel Kant once re- marked upon those philosophers
who marshalled reasons in the most strenuous and demanding way to
prove that we are incapable of reason. Now, in a similar style, we
have seen people in Washington recently, who have spen t their
lives appealing to the logic and language of natural rights, but
who find themselves denouncing Clarence Thomas for taking natural
rights seriously. We find these people, members of the political
class, on the left as well as the right, who seem to be affecting
the style of Claude Rains in the movie "Casablanca": they affect to
be "shocked- shocked!' that anyone should truly find the anchor of
his understanding in the natural rights teach- ings of Abraham
Lincoln and the American founders; that anyo n e should take
seriously the moral premises on which the American regime and the
Constitution were founded. Lincoln-Douglas Debates. For most people
trained in the modem law school, there is some- thing novel, or
even exotic, about the notion of natural ri g hts. If we bring back
the classic debate between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas,
most lawyers would align themselves with Douglas, whether they are
conservatives or liberals. Most of the teaching in the law schools
has been in the spirit of Douglas. M ost lawyers don't recall what
was in dispute between Lincoln and Douglas; they have heard
something about natural rights, but they have the impression that
the case for natural rights was refuted long ago, for reasons that
have slipped from memory. We oug h t to recall, then, the way in
which the question of natural rights was posed again during the
"crisis of our house divided," in the debate between Lincoln and
Douglas. Ile issue was cast in this way: When the Founders declared
in the Declaration of Indepe n - dence that "all men are created
equal," did they in fact mean aU men, blacks as well as whites? Or
did they really mean-as Douglas contended-all white men, or all
people of British stock? In that case-as Harry Jaffa offered the
translation-when the Foun d ers were proclaiming the right of all
men everywhere to be governed by their own consent, they were
really proclaiming the right of all men, everywhere, to be Britishl
As Jaffa pointed out, that notion would have made a fine aria in a
Gilbert & Sullivan o p eretta, but it hardly made sense of what
the Founders were saying. Lincoln argued, on the other side, that
when the founders said "all men," they meant, as an ab- stract,
universal proposition, all men. It was not that all men were
equally intelligent, eq u ally virtuous, equally deserving of
rewards and punishment. But they deserved to be measured and judged
by the same, equal standard-, and whether they were slow of wit, or
swift, they deserved to be governed only with their own consent. As
Lincoln and the Founders understood, that claim arose from nature,
from the things that enduringly separated human beings from
animals; and hence the universal sweep of those rights: those
rights would be the same in all places, where human nature remained
the same, and human beings were still distinguishable from animals.
That sense of "human nature' identified what was human by marking
off the differences that sep- arated human things finorn the things
that were either superhuman or subhuman. And so the
Dr. Hadley Arkes is-Edward Ney Professor of Jurisprudence and
American Institutions at Amherst College and an Adjunct Scholar at
7be Heritage Foundation. He delivered this address at 1U Heritage
Foundation on December 11, 199 1.
ISSN 0272-1155. 0 IM by Mw Heritage Foundation.
reasoning ran in this way: that no man was by nature the ruler
of other men in the way that God was, by nature, the ruler of men,
and men were, by nature, the ruler of dogs, horses, or monkeys.
Animal Rights. Even in this age of animal rights, no one has
thought it especially apt to ob- tain the consent of dogs and
horses before we rule them, or to secure the informed consent of
our pets before we authorize surgery for them. But on the other
hand we persist in the judgment that beings who can giv e and
understand reasons deserve to be ruled with the rendering of
reasons, in a regime of five elections. Whether we are in Europe,
then, or Africa, or Asia, the case in princi- ple for a government
of consent remains the same: beings who can give and und e rstand
reasons do not deserve to be ruled in the way that we are warranted
in ruling horses and monkeys. Hence the irony we find now in the
universities: -the people on the Left, flirting with
deconstruction, Derrida, and Heidegger, insist that there are n o
moral truths that hold across cul- tures, and that there is no
"nature." The differences between humans and other species, or even
the Oferences between men and women are not fixed in nature, but
"socially constructed," a matter of convention and imagin a tion.
And yet, these people support the interests in "human lib-
eration," and rights of feminism in all places. Apparently, there
are human rights-rights that arise for human beings in all
places-but there are no "humans," and no truths that would make t h
ese rights truly rightful. Independent Standards vs. Majority Rule.
But in the debate with Lincoln, Stephen Douglas denied that them
were any rights that arose in this way from nature. Douglas came
closer to the cultural relativists, on the left and right , of our
own day, in holding that all rights are "relative" to the s of
right and wrong that are held in any place, or in the local
culture. These rights do not derive from nature; they exist only
because they are "posited," set down, in formal statutes by
particular men in particular places. They were rights, as we say,
of "positive law." But then the question of course arose: What if
the local culture were divided in.its opinions about right and
wrong, as this country was divided in the middle of the nine t
eenth century on the ques- tion of slavery? Which grand of opinion
was more authoritative'. more genuinely reflective, of the local
culture? And the answer was clear: the strand of opinion that was
dominant. That is, with the premises of positivism or cul t ural
relativism, what we mean by right and wrong is "that which is
approved (or disapproved) by the majority-" But as Lincoln
understood, that doctrine would cut the ground out from under the
very notion of constitutional rights: For if the will of the ma j
ority is the decisive test of right and wrong, there could be no
independent standard to which we could appeal in challenging the
judgments reached by a majority, and vindicating the rights of a
minority. And so what we must understand here is that we are
appealing to the logic of natural rights whenever we invoke some
independent standard of right and wrong, apart from the will of the
majority, and apart from anything that has been posited or set down
in a statute or in the text of the Constitution. This i s .sely the
understanding to which people like Joseph Biden and Laurence Tribe
were appealing four years ago, when they sought to draw a dramatic
contrast between them- selves and Robert Bork by pointing up Bork's
attachment to legal positivism. When Bide n opened the hearings
over Bork, he staked out for himself a natural rights position: He
insisted that he had rights that were "not dadved from the
Constitution... [or] from any government... [or] from any majority.
My rights are [he saidj because I exist. " That is, certain rights
flowed to him, as Biden said, simply on account of his standing as
a human being, from the moment he ex- ists. That sentiment seemed
sufficiently sweeping that it would encompass the unborn child, as
soon as she comes to "exist." B ut we assumed that Biden would not
allow his newly discovered natural rights position to undercut his
support for abortion. We may have rights as soon as we exist, but
presumably other people will be left to decide whether we exist,
and have rights that o thers are obliged to respect.
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Chairman Biden's adviser, Professor Tribe, appealed to the logic
of unwritten rights in oppos- ing Judge Bork, but he has always
been uneasy over the claim of "natural rights" to speak of moral
truths. Ile Founders held that "all men are created equal" was a
self-evident, or necessary truth. Tribe would support the same
principle, but he doesn't wish to claim it is true. But what sense
would it make to claim rights that am false, or which am not truly
"righrmn any event, Tribe has professed to reject natural rights
because certain judges in the past have made extrava- gant mistakes
in reasoning from natural rights. Judges have made even more
extravagant mistakes, of course, in rejecting natur-al rights, and
defending slav e ry. But from the fact that mis- takes have been
made in construing natural rights, would Tribe and his friends wish
to conclude that there are no such things as "human
rights'@--rights drawn from the very nature of human be- ings?
Attacks on Natural Law. T he critics of natural law, on the right
and the left, have spent their energies in attacking an
understanding of natural law that no proponent of natural law would
take seriously. They have often assumed that natural law arrives at
an understanding of hum a n nature by drawing generalizations from
the record of human behavior. In this vein, Richard Pos- ner has
treated Social Darwinism as one theory of natural law: that theory
would offer "the survival of the fittese' as a "law" or a doctrine
about the behav i or that is natural to men. But the Proponents of
natural law recognized long ago that we could not draw out natural
law in this way, as a generalization fiun experience. If we did, we
would find that genocide, infanticide, slavery, have been enduring,
int r actable parts of the human record. Would we conclude then
that infanticide and slavery are natural to human beings? And yet,
natural law has ever rejected the notion of slavery and the
destruction of the innocent; and so it should be plain that natural
la w has never depended merely on generalizations about the
behavior of humans. All notions of natural law have depended on an
understanding of what was higher or lower in human nature; about
the attributes that were distinctively human, as opposed to the att
r ibutes that we shared with other animals. Lincoln could refer to
"the better angels in our nature"; and Aris- totle and Kant could
recognize, as quite distinct to human beings, the capacity to
reason about the things that are right or wrong, justified or u
njustified. The giving and demanding of justifica- tions is as much
a part of our natures as the understanding of space and time; it is
as much a part of our natural world as trees and rocks. Even people
who reject the existence of morality and moral reas o ning, end up
insisting to us passionately that it would be "wrong" and
"unjustified7 for others to impose moral judgments on them. That
is, they find themselves appealing to the logic and language of
morality for the sake of sta&g their resistance to mora l ity.
And if we are asked, Can we conduct politics and law, can we argue
over matters of right and wrong, without the language and logic of
moral reasoning, we might as well ask: Can we order coffee without
using syntax? This language, this logic, simply c a nnot be purged
from our experience. Even the most con- firmed positivists cannot
purge from their language the logic of moral reasoning, and they
don't seem to be aware that they are simply taking for granted one
of the most important meanings of natural l aw: namely, the
discourse on right and wrong that is accessible, commonly, to all
human beings as human beings, regardless of their religion or their
citizenship. Justifying Slavery. In this understanding, we see
natural rights at work whenever we find pe o - ple engaged in
principled reasoning about the things that are right and wrong; and
there is no more dramatic example of principled reasoning than that
fragment written by Lincoln, in which he imagined himself engaged
in an argument with an owner of slav e s. He puts the question of
how the man could be justified in making slaves of other human
beings: Is it intelligence, he asks? Then beware: "By this rule,
you are to be slave to the first man you meet, with an intellect
superior to your own." Is it color- that people of lighter skin
have a right to enslave people of
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darker skin. Then take care again: "by this rule, you are to be
slave to the first man you meet, with a fairer skin than your own."
As the argument is drawn forth, as a compelling form of principled
reasoning, the pitch is this: There is nothing one could cite, in
justifying the enslavement of black people, that would not Jus-
tify die enslavement of whites as well. Now it is critical for my
point here to notice that nowhere in this chain o f reasoning does
Lincoln appeal to faith or revelation. There is no religious claim
here. This argument can be understood-it can be 'measured, grasped,
judged for its validity-by any person of reason, regardless of his
religious persuasion. I have suggest e d in print that the same
style of masoning may be applied to the question of abortion: Why
is a fetus, or an unborn child, thought to be less than a human
being, with a claim to the protections of the law? Because she
doesn't speak yet? Neither do deaf mu t es. Because she lacks arms
or legs? Many people were born with missing limbs, or they may come
to lose an arm or a leg, and yet we don't say that they have
suffered a change in species, that they have become something less
than human beings. It is one of t he common cliches now of our
politics to insist that abortion is a religious question, and
therefore it may not be addressed in our politics. But we can
simply proceed in this style of reasoning, die style of a
principled argument, in testing the argument s brought forward on
abortion, and we can do that in the style of Lincoln, without the
need to appeal to revelation or to any claims of religious faith.
Moral Reasoning. But if we say that it is possible to engage in
that kind of conversation, we are sayin g that it is possible to
have a discourse, among fellow citizens, about the things that are
right or wrong, even when those citizens are drawn from different
nationalities and different com- munities of faith. And that is
precisely what was meant in that " p roposition," as Lincoln called
it, on which this republic was founded, the proposition that "all
men are created equal." This nation would not require, as the
ground of citizenship, a common ethnic identity. This nation was
founded on a proposition, and t h e ground of our citizenship came
in our capacity to understand that proposition: to understand the
implications for our duties and our -rights that arise fi-om our'
natural equality. I think we would find, in the end, that even the
positivists on the left and right would not wish to argue that
constitutional government, or government by consent, is good merely
because it is the form of government that most people prefer, and
that it would cease to be good if most peo- ple should cease to
prefer it. I think we will find a disposition to think that there
is something in principle good about this form of government, that
it is the kind of government nwstfittingfor the nature oftuman
beings. I think we will find, even among the most adamant
positivists, a marke d inclination to believe there are standards
of right and wrong that do not depend on the votes of a majority;
that there are rights that do not depend on our citizenship; that
there are things we may aptly call "human rights"; and there are
laws of reason that allow us to make some plausible distinctions
between the claims of rights that are reasonable or unreasonable,
jus- tified. or unjustified. What we will discover then, I think,
is that even the people who profess to be most skeptical of natural
right s cannot get through the day without the use of moral
reasoning. In spite of themselves, they write and speak with the
language of reason, and they have spoken natural justice all their
lives.
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