A bold challenge to a central assumption in modern moral and legal
thinking, showing that wrongs and rights are not flip sides of the
same coin but instead represent fundamentally distinct moral
phenomena. It is commonplace to regard rights and wrongs as mirror
images of each other: to be wronged, we think, is to have one’s
rights violated. According to this familiar picture of the moral
landscape, there is an inescapable relationship between our claims on
others and our complaints against them. Indeed, if to have a right
means just that one can reasonably claim redress for being wronged,
then there is really nothing separating wrongs and rights. Legal
scholar and philosopher Nicolas Cornell rejects this view. He argues
that although wrongs and rights often correspond and overlap, they
diverge systematically in a range of contexts and play substantively
different roles in our lives. Wrongs are not merely the outline left
where rights have been taken away, and rights are more than just the
glimmer of future liability. To make its case, Wrongs and Rights Come
Apart engages a variety of examples from literature, legal cases,
moral philosophy, and contemporary culture. In accessible, lively
prose, Cornell explores topics such as illicit promises, forgiveness,
animal rights, and economic exploitation. It turns out that potential
wrongs—unlike rights—do not determine how we ought to conduct
ourselves. And crucially, rights—unlike wrongs—do not tell us what
corrective action is appropriate after a violation. Only by seeing
rights and wrongs as distinct concepts, Cornell concludes, can we do
justice to the richness of our interpersonal obligations.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674245037
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter