What Rights Do We Have?
(To appear in The Journal of Value Inquiry)

The concept of “rights” was developed, in part, from the concept
of “right”—correct, true—as used in the tradition of natural law
ethics (concerning how we ought to act or not act because we are
human beings). In time a theory of natural rights was produced by
John Locke (1632-1704). It concerned political life—how our human
communities should be governed, organized. In this paper I wish to
address a number of complications that have been identified with
natural rights theory and show that these complications are manageable.
What did the theory contend are our basic individual rights?
Locke argued that each of us has rights to our lives and resources, including
what we produce or create. We are supposedly sovereign, so
no one may rule us; slavery, serfdom, or involuntary servitude are
forbidden.1 Any such relationship of ruler and ruled between us and
others, Locke argued, is contrary to our nature. (Lockean basic rights
are sometimes called “relational.” They serve to identify, Locke maintained,
the principles of the most basic relations between people, ones
never to be violated, even by government, even in war time, even in
emergencies.)

The Lockean theory had considerable impact on Anglo American
jurisprudence. Having Lockean rights, for example, implies a legally
enforceable obligation on the part of everyone to respect them,
not to violate them—for anyone who chooses to live in a human
community, such obligations are binding. (I’ll return to this point in a
separate concluding discussion.) Modern Lockean theorists such as
Robert Nozick argued that these basic rights identify the “borders” or
“side constraints” around people, the area of their free actions, ones
others have the enforceable obligation not to trespass on.
In the natural rights tradition of our basic rights, they are compossible,
which means everyone has them and they must be equally
respected regardless of who the holder is, man, woman, black, white,
tall, short, native or from abroad. These are what the natural individual
rights are that Locke identified. Each of us has them because we
are all human beings (that is, because of our human nature).

The American Founders also called these Lockean rights unalienable
because, as Locke and his followers viewed it, just by being a
human being, each of us is supposed to possess them and cannot lose
them. (Even when we commit crimes for which we are convicted and
put into jail, our Lockean rights remain intact because, supposedly,
this outcome stems from a choice we have made that has the predictable
consequence that we will be banished from society.)

John Locke argued that since each of us, in adulthood, is “free
and independent,” when we live in communities this needs to be acknowledge
and we need an institution, a legal order, so as to protect
our freedom and independence. Because Lockean basic rights are
prohibitions on others, they are called “negative” rights—they are
supposed to place a “stop” or “halt” sign before everyone, requiring
each to abstains from violating them.

As Locke and quite a few others before him—in what is called
the Natural Law tradition of ethics and politics—maintained, our basic
rights are supposed to be natural and thus not created or granted
(as privileges would be) by people, including governments. Governments
or law-makers are themselves supposed to be bound by these
rights to conduct their administrative and other duties without violating
them. The laws of a just society, Lockeans argue, lay out these
rights in their basic document, such as a Constitution (in, for example,
the US Bill of Rights) and legislators are to be guided by such a
document to only make such laws that do not violate these rights;
justices are then supposed to be responsible to strike down laws that
violate them when the legislators are so zealous as to make them despite
what their constitutionally limited powers authorize them to do.
All rights are prohibitions, even the more recent so called positive
rights, such a the right to health care or social security (those
listed in what Franklin D. Roosevelt called the Second Bill of Rights).
If we do have such positive rights, it implies that no one may prevent
us from obtaining them (e.g., health care, education). Since, however,
if we have positive rights, their respect and protection would violate
our negative rights, Lockean theorists do not defend positive rights
and claim it’s wrong to believe in them.

Does the US Constitution exhibits the influence of basic (Lockean)
rights theory? Let’s consider the 4th Amendment, which speaks
of “the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers,
and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizure, shall not
be violated….etc.” Or the 5th, which speaks of private property that
may not be taken unless for a public purpose (court house, police station).
These amendments reflect Locke’s own identification of private
property (estate) as a fundamental right.

When the US Constitution’s Bill of Rights mentions, in the 6th
Amendment, that “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy
the right to a speedy and public trial, etc.,” this shows the influence
of the Lockean idea that each of us has a natural right to his or
her life and liberty, meaning that only if there is credible reason provided
in an orderly fashion may someone be incarcerated and only if
there is a prompt procedure afoot making sure that the charges
against the individual will be fully investigated. The idea that it is the
prosecution who has the duty to make a case against the defendant in
a criminal case reflects the (Lockean) idea that each of us is indeed
free and independent and must be so treated unless we have ourselves
forsaken or voided such treatment by our commission of a
crime that violates the rights of someone else.

In the kind of political system the Founders of the American
republic set out to establish, the rights everyone has, given that they
are unalienable, may not be set aside even in times of emergency or
danger. As Benjamin Franklin put it, “Those who would sacrifice liberty
for security deserve neither….”

An Argument about Welfare Rights
Now let me briefly address an argument concerning welfare
rights made against the late Robert Nozick by Adrian Bardon, recently.
2 Bardon brings up an issue that’s central to the nature of basic individual
rights that the American Founders proposed as the foundations
of a constitutional government (and were, in fact, partly incorporated
and elaborated in the Bill of Rights).

Bardon argues that he has successfully “cast doubt on that approach
to rights,” the one that holds that “there are negative rights
that cannot be outweighed.”3 Interestingly there is no need to go
much further, since Bardon’s way of putting his point already shows
how wide of the mark he is concerning an essential feature or nature
of rights. Specifically, individual rights, the unalienable sort the Declaration
lists, aren’t like other good things—such as ice skating, volleyball,
dinner at home or at a restaurant, a vacation in Hawaii or one
in Italy—which may be weighed and compared. It’s a category mistake
to think they are, not unlike thinking that one can weigh seconds
or that fingers can think about something.

Consider a very widely accepted right, that of a woman to be
free of rape. What would it mean to have such a right outweighed?
Bardon’s conception of such a basic right raises the possibility
that someone might weigh it against, say, a desperate male’s
desire to gain sexual satisfaction by using her against her will. But
this is quite out of the question—the two are incomparable, incommensurate.
The right to be free is a principle—a firm limit or a basic
standard of right conduct if you will—which identifies the fact that
women are free to do as they choose involving their own bodies, that
they are sovereign authorities concerning how to live their sex lives,
whom they will grant their consent to engage in sex, etc.4
Of course, Bardon is concerned with property rights but he forgets
that these, too, are rights to action, not rights to objects. As Ayn
Rand makes clear, “the right to property is a right to action, like all
the others: it is not the right to an object, but to the action and the
consequences of producing or earning that object. It is not a guarantee
that a man will earn any property, but only a guarantee that he
will own it if he earns it. It is the right to gain, to keep, to use and to
dispose of material values.”5 Put another way, the right to private
property is a right to acquire and to hold—which are both actions—
various items no one has previously acquired and is holding, or ones
that others (who have acquired and are holding them) are willing,
freely, to part with (another action).

So, in fact, private property rights are akin to rights to act freely—
as when one acts to engage in consensual sex or work or
recreation. In the case of property rights, one acts to engage in, as it
were, consensual acquisition or holding of some items. (Notice, no
one may impose ownership on another against his or her consent because
of this right to freedom of actions such as acquisition and holding.)

Thus, property rights identify someone’s sphere or range of
freedom of action vis-à-vis items in the world, not unlike the manner
in which the right to freedom of speech spells out spheres of freedom
of action vis-à-vis verbal or written expression of ideas. Indeed, these
latter presuppose the right to private property, for speeches need to
be given someplace to which one has a right or gained permission
from those who do, and writing takes places on materials (paper,
blackboards, sand, computers, etc.)

Now it is true that others could well desperately need the items
someone has come to own by exercising the right to acquisition and
holding, but since that exercise may not be interfered with and interference
with it would place others in the position of violating the
agent’s basic rights—that is, sovereignty—consent needs to be secured
in order to obtain even such desperately needed items. A need
cannot be weighed against a right, any more than a wish or desire or
urgent want can be weighed against a right.

There can be no weighing involved, not between rights, nor between
rights and needs, etc., although a rights holder could very well
weigh whether to hang on to what he or she owns, contribute it to the
person in dire need, to some cause or project, or otherwise dispose of
it in light of his or her weighing of the importance of these alternative
possibilities. The weighing is not of different rights or different
people’s rights, but of the importance or value of the goals to which
one may contribute what one has the right to freely acquire.

Here is what would happen if the weighing were about rights.
Someone would have to do the weighing. By what right would such
a person weigh other people’s rights? Would that person’s right to
weigh also be open to being weighed? By whom? The whole process
would amount to a conceptual and public policy mess.

In fact, the role—or conceptual purpose—of basic individual
rights is to remove from public policy (using constitutional laws that
rest on rights) the element of arbitrariness, by basing decisions on
self-consistent, compossible principles—that is, on the rule of law—
instead. The very conceptual point of rights within the sphere of social,
political and legal policy is lost if they are subject to being
weighed, since they are supposed to be the rock-solid foundation of
public policy decision-making—if I have a right to do X, this is the
end of the story—none may act against me as I do X.

There is no such thing as “weighing rights”—the idea is what
philosophers call a category mistake, akin to talk about weighing,
say, time or concepts. Indeed, to even consider weighing rights is to
suggest that the importance of human beings, vis-à-vis their place in
the citizenry, may be weighed against each other within the realm of
politics, something that had been abandoned once the idea of inherent
status was jettisoned, finally, so no one could justly claim to be
more important than someone else as far as the law of the land is
concerned.

Ought Individualists to Respect Others’ Rights?
There are different approaches to supporting the free society.
Some provide a utilitarian case, claiming that freedom promotes
overall satisfaction or happiness or pleasure. Some hold that we have
God given rights and only a free society pays adequate attention to
this fact, one the requires everyone to be free. Some advance no argument
at all but claim it is an axiom of social life that people must
be free to do what they want, not be subject to the will of others who
haven’t been given permission to interfere.

The argument I consider most pertinent to defending the free
society comes from the English philosopher Jon Locke, with some
additions from more recent political philosophy, for example, the
ideas of Ayn Rand, Eric Mack, Douglas B. Rasmussen and Douglas J.
Den Uyl and myself.6 It rests on the idea that human individuals are
moral agents and require, in their communities, what the late Robert
Nozick called “moral space,” a sphere of personal authority—
sovereignty—so as to carry out their moral responsibilities. Accordingly,
the general system of laws and public policies of any civilized,
just human community would need to conform to the principles
of individual rights. Otherwise it is not fit for human moral
flourishing, as well as the innumerable ways of human life that
would thrive so as to achieve that flourishing.

Are human beings moral agents? That is, does human life include
a significant dimension of ethical or moral tasks that individuals
ought to carry out? This is a very controversial issues but without
entering the debate in detail it can be noted, in support of it, that
people do tend to treat each other as if this were true. Children are
brought up taught to conduct themselves well rather than badly,
adults are constantly implored to act properly in any sphere of their
lives, even those professionally engaged in discussing this topic, philosophers,
scholars, and pundits are held to standards they are expected
to observe in their work. Parents, colleagues, teachers, politicians,
diplomats, soldiers, police officers—in short all of us are expected
to act ethically. This certainly suggests that human beings are
moral agents.7

The natural rights classical liberal-libertarian position beings
with an understanding of human nature as having an essential moral
dimension. It then considers the implications of this fact for an understanding
of the just human community. Such a community would
require mutual respect and protection of everyone’s individual
rights, rights one has because of one’s human (moral) nature. Of
course, there are numerous implications apart from this, including
that with respect for and protection of individual rights there would
be development, growth of knowledge, flourishing of the arts, encouragement
of peaceful human relations, etc., and so forth. This is what
is stressed by those who defend the free society on utilitarian
grounds and their defense is, of course, important. Only it is incomplete
because sometimes, even if only rarely, these goals may be
promoted by violating individual rights. The task of a just system of
laws and public policies is to secure for every individual the condition
for his or her moral agency. Other consequences are not so important
as this one, period.

Debates about Freedom
Among champions of the free society there are numerous debates
afoot. One concerns whether any kind of government is justified.
Another concerns the problem of how to spell out the right to
private property in spheres such as the air mass. Yet another concerns
what sort of moral responsibility, if any, human beings have
toward other animals.

One live debate I have focused upon in my work is why one
ought to respect other people’s rights. For example, Siegfried Van
Duffel has noted, in his essay “Libertarian Natural Rights,”8 that
“The idea that people are sovereign beings does not allow us to infer
that they have an obligation to respect each others’ sovereignty.”9
One way to show that the respect for the rights of others is warranted
is to argue along the following lines: If one should live a rational,
wise and prudent life, as one surely should, and if one takes
part in social life, which surely is a wise and prudent thing for everyone
to do, one should also recognize one’s fellows in one’s communities
for the human beings who they are. And given our mutual humanity,
we all require in our communities a sphere of personal authority
or sovereignty in our lives. This is what rights help us identify,
the personal authority or realm of sovereignty of every individual
as a human being who lives among other human beings and needs to
embark upon a flourishing life as a matter of one’s own initiative; for
this everyone requires a sphere of jurisdiction or, as the late Robert
Nozick called it, moral space.

So it follows from one’s moral responsibility to be rational, wise
and prudent—to live, in short, morally virtuously— and one’s membership
in a human community, that one ought to respect everyone’s
individual rights—one’s own, by means of proper self-defense, and
those of one’s fellows as providing what Nozick called basic “side
constraints” as one interacts with them.

Some among champions of the free society claim this will not
work because, first of all, these are merely reasons having to do with
oneself, what should motivate one to treat others with respect. Also,
but this is a somewhat different objection, there can be some cases
when being rational, wise, and prudent would guide one toward not
respecting the rights of others, what in the study of ethics are called
“desert island” or “life boat” cases. If one finds oneself in such a situation—
if, for example, one’s own ultimate end, one’s life, comes to be
pitted against another’s, even someone who hasn’t hurt one in the
least—there will be no moral responsibility to respect that other’s
rights.

The first objection one can answer by noting that when one
finds reason to respect other people’s rights, these aren’t about what
should motivate one but why certain considerations are worth heeding
in how one acts. Although, of course, one is an individual, one’s
reasons are not, as it were, individual reasons. The belief that they
must be such comes from a misunderstanding of human reason, one
that sees reasoning as calculation, weighing pluses and minuses, a
cost-benefit analysis. In other words, the answer stresses that the discussion
here is about principles of community life, not specific interests
and preferences, although, of course, everyone does have a basic
stake in living in a society that is guided, most generally, by the basic
principles of individual rights.

The answer to the other objection is that classical quip, namely,
“hard cases make bad law.” In other words, respect for rights is a
guide to forging the laws or general principles of a country. And
these laws should not be based on rare exceptions such as life boat or
desert island cases. But why not? Should we give up on respecting
the rights of others just because it is difficult to do so?

John Locke, the father of the classical liberal system of natural
rights, said that under certain circumstances “politics is impossible,”
suggesting that talk or rights doesn’t apply in such cases. In such
emergency situations human beings must be guided not by political
principles but by their personal virtues. So while rights may be disregarded
in such rare cases, something else will take their place.

There is another way to defend the responsibility to respect
others’ rights, namely, by defending the merits of a complete, integrated
system of rights by which a country should be organized, on
which its laws should be based. Some champions of liberty have argued
for these principles that a country needs as special types, guiding
not one’s conduct—not a matter of ethics—but as guiding how
laws are to be made—a matter of politics and law. The idea of these
broad principles is to facilitate the country’s population to be able to
carry on in peace and flourish.

Others’ rights then aren’t a matter of case by case respect for
them but of loyalty to a general legal infrastructure that any just society,
within which one and all can flourish, requires. When we get
out of our intimate relationships and join the world, as it were,
wherein there are millions of strangers of whom we know only that
they are also human beings, we need some very general principles
which define our realm of self-direction, wherein we can order our
actions. And individual human rights are just such very general principles.
As we “join the world,” it is our moral responsibility to adopt
these principles as guide for how to treat others, others who aren’t
family, friends, neighbors, associates and so forth, just people.10

This has been advanced as a new solution to the problem of
how to link ethics to politics in the right way. And while it is a new
way of putting the solution, in my view strong intimations of this solution
have been advanced in the history of classical liberal, libertarian
thought. But putting the matter in this new fashion is, I think,
very beneficial. This way of defending respect for the rights of all
persons makes good sense but it isn’t brand new. Indeed, it resembles,
as I see it, the idea that it is rational, wise and prudent to see
others as requiring the same sovereignty that one has a justified interest
in having all others respect. Such reciprocity makes the best
sense when one lives among other people.

But it may also be a good idea to speak of the overall principles one signs up to abide by just to keep things peaceful and civilized when one joins social life, when one becomes an adult human being.

Whichever way it is the best way to lay out the idea, it comes to
something fairly simple: All persons ought to recognize that they and
all others have rights and these rights may never be violated except
perhaps in those rare hard cases on which nothing general ought to
be based.

More generally, the various idiosyncratic ways of defending the
free society have something to do with the individual styles of thinking
of those who advance these ways rather than with any deep need
for their particular way of understanding human community life.
There isn’t all that much new under the sun, actually, so it is no wonder
that the variations aren’t always substantively significant.
In highly abstract endeavors such as political philosophy or jurisprudence,
the more contributions of intelligent folks of good will
the better. Different members of human communities may in fact
need to be reminded of the basic principles by which people need to
interact in somewhat different terms. That is one of the consequences
of our being unique individuals all the while being human as well.

Anti-Natural Rights
Some prominent contemporary political thinking would have
us believe that our rights are granted to us by government. Famous
academics such as Stephen Holmes and Cass R. Sunstein have argued
“As they put it, “individual rights and freedoms depend fundamentally
on vigorous state action”11 and “Statelessness means rightlessness.”
12

This is just the opposite of what classical liberal natural rights
theorists think and that the American Founders thought. In the Declaration
they stated, albeit rather succinctly, that we have rights because
our very creation as human beings has endowed us with them. And
they held that these were unalienable and government is instituted so
as to secure them. Clearly, this implies the basic individual human
rights come before the government instituted to secure them for us.
But perhaps Holmes and Sunstein are right and the American
Founders had it backwards. What can we say, in just a few words, in
support of the Founder’s idea? Without rehashing John Locke’s and
his followers’ defense of the character of our rights—as derivable
from our human nature and the requirements for human community
life—there are some simple matters that point to the fact that Holmes
and Sunstein have it wrong.

Consider a thought experiment that isn’t at all far fetched: An
adult human being is stranded in the wild where there is no law, no
police, no courts, nothing. Someone else comes upon him and turns
out to be quite aggressive. He is attacked, physically, and all of what
he has made for himself out there to survive is under the threat of being
taken away from him.

It seems pretty clear that such a person would do the right
thing to defend himself, if he could, against the aggressor who is
threatening his life, his prospects for a future, maybe his family and
friends as well (if we build up the case in more detail). And if he
were to be challenged afterwards why he resisted being attacked and
robbed, he could well say, “This fellow wasn’t peaceful toward me,
didn’t respect my rights as a fellow human being, so I had to resist
him, physically, so he couldn’t succeed in his threats.” Or something
more simple but quite along these lines.

Yet, if our rights depended upon government granting them to
us, such a line of argument, justifying self-defense, wouldn’t hold up.
Those who challenged the victim of the attack for resisting the aggressor
might say, “But, listen here, since government is what grants
us our rights, and there is no government out here in the wilds, you
have no rights. Not to your life, not to your liberty, not to your property
and not to self-defense, certainly. Not, at least, until a government
is established and grants you these rights. Until then it is a free
for all and no complaints make sense against our actions that you
consider aggressive.” (Indeed, that is pretty much how Hobbes, but
not Locke, would have understood the situation in the state of nature
Hobbes did believe that in civil society we are justified in defending
our lives, even against the government.13)

Surely this would be absurd. Yet that is just what would follow
if the prominent analysis of individual rights, advanced by the likes
of Holmes and Sunstein, would be sound.14 No one would have any
justification putting up any resistance against attackers unless some
government issued a grant of rights. Given, however, that there are
not just imaginable but real circumstances in which human beings interact
with no government having been established or in operation
(for the time being, at least), and given that some of these people can
act violently toward others, there is need for some idea that makes
sense of the situation and gives guidance to conduct on the part of
those who are victims of the violence. These ideas may not be expressed
entirely in the familiar terms of individual rights but that is
what they would be intimating, even if somewhat unclearly and undeveloped.
15

Other Sources of Objections
Of course, saying this much does not end the debate. There are
pacifists who will object, as well as communitarians, and many others
who reject the very idea that an individual is a sovereign being, that
he or she should be his or her own master and not subject, without
consent, to the will of others. That is one reason why there is a large
literature of political philosophy and theory that considers these issues.
Still, not all of us has the luxury to embark upon a scholarly review
of this literature. We need to have the ideas in play made clear,
in relatively simple terms. It looks very much like when this is done,
the case for our having rights, based on our human nature as moral
agents (under normal circumstances) and before they are codifies in
law and secured by way of a legal order and its administrators is a
better one than its opposite. The simple but clear enough notion of
self-defense, which would make plain enough sense to any rational
person—however removed from the sophisticated discussions of
academic political thought—makes clear enough that individual
rights precede law and government.

Of course, there is no final answer in these or most other matters
that concern human beings.16 The very idea of a final, timeless,
perfect answer is ultimately incoherent, so seeking it is futile. Instead,
it is best to provide the most up to date, well founded (both on theory
and history or experience) solution to the problem of human community
life, namely, how to best organize it. That answer, it appears,
is that resting our laws and public policies on a system of basic individual
rights is the most rational approach to take.

Endnotes:
1 As punishment, Locke thought what is construed as slavery could be justified. But,
of course, this is uncontroversial except perhaps for pacifists.
2 Adrian Bardon, “From Nozick to Welfare Rights,” Critical Review, Vol. 14 (2000):
481-501.
3 Ibid., p. 496.
4 This sovereignty does not mean, as some have held against libertarianism, that
whatever the woman chooses to do is morally unobjectionable. There is a vast
difference between having a right to do X and it being morally proper to do X,
and there is also a vast difference between morally condemning and legally banning
doing X.
5 Ayn Rand, Capitalism: the Unknown Ideal (New York: New American Library,
1967), p. 322. Both Nozick and Rand make clear, pace Bardon’s contention about
defenders of private property rights, that earning isn’t the sole means by which
ownership can be established—we have a right to our hair or lungs without having
earned these because to act to gain and to keep them, as it were, is part of the
process of growing up and to become ourselves. (Life itself is a process of selfgenerated
action so that even the right to life is a right to a wide range of actions.)
See, Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State, and Utopia (New York: Basic Books, 1974), p.
32-33, and Ayn Rand, “Untitled Letter, Part II,” The Ayn Rand Letter, Vol. II, #10,
p. 169.
6 Ayn Rand, “The Nature of Government,” in Capitalism, The Unknown Ideal (New
York: New American Library, 1966), Douglas B. Rasmussen and Douglas J. Den
Uyl, Liberty and Nature, An Aristotelian Defense of Liberal Order (Chicago: Open
Court Publishing Co., Inc., 1991), Eric Mack, “In Defense of the Jurisdiction
Theory of Rights,” The Journal of Ethics, vol. 4 (2000), pp. 71-98, and Tibor R. Machan,
Individuals and Their Rights (Chicago: Open Court Publ. Co., Inc., 1989). See,
also, the contributions to Tibor R. Machan, ed., Individual Rights Reconsidered
(Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 2001).
7 A more systematic defense of human moral agency is offered in Machan, Individuals
and Their Rights, and in Machan, Classical Individualism (London: Routledge,
1998) as well as by numerous classical philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle,
Aquinas, Locke, Kant, et al. For a discussion of the foundations of such
moral agency, see Tibor R. Machan, Initiative—Human Agency and Society (Stanford,
CA: Hoover Institution Press, 2000).
7 Siegfried Van Duffer, “Libertarian Natural Rights,” Critical Review, Vol. 16
(2004), pp. 353-402.
8 Ibid., p. 37.
10 I believe this describes, briefly but accurately, the central point of Rasmussen’s
and Den Uyl’s position, especially as laid out in Norms of Liberty, a Perfectionist
Basis for Non-perfectionist Politics (College Station, PA: Pennsylvania University
Press, 2006).
11 The Cost of Rights (W. W. Norton, 1999): 14.
12 Ibid., 19.
12 Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan (Baltimore, Penguin Books, 1968).
13 Another team of critics of the classical liberal natural rights stance are Liam
Murphy and Thomas Nagel, The Myth of Ownership (New York: Oxford University
Press, 2002). They also insist that rights are grants of government. This is actually
a reactionary view, taking us back to monarchies in which the king was
seen as supreme and the rest were subjects, not sovereign citizens with basic
rights.
15 There is another problem with the notion that governments grant our rights—how
did governments (that is, those in or who constitute the government) come to have
the authority to grant rights? By what right are they doing this if rights must be
granted by them?
16 See, for more, Tibor R. Machan, Objectivity: Recovering Determinate Reality in
Philosophy, Science, and Everyday Life (Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2004).

Tibor R. Machan
R. C. Hoiles Chair in Business Ethics