In this article I reconstruct the contribution of some central Hellenistic political thinkers to a theory of human rights. Starting point is the traditional Stoic conception of the law of nature as a power in which only perfect human beings actively participate. In the 2nd century BC the Stoic Panaetius adjusted this traditional high-minded theory by also allowing for a lower level of human excellence. This second-rate human excellence can be achieved just by following ‘proper functions’, which are derived from ordinary human nature and can be laid down in rules. From here, it was only a small, yet decisive step – presumably to be attributed to one of Cicero’s teachers – to discard the highest level of human perfection altogether. This step, I argue, paved the way for an understanding of the rules of natural law in terms of human rights. |
Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy
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Miscellaneous |
In memoriam Koen Raes |
Authors | Carel Smith |
Miscellaneous |
VWR-dissertatieprijs 2009-2010 |
Editorial |
Hoeveel economie kan het recht verdragen? |
Authors | Rob Schwitters |
Author's information |
Article |
Over de klassieke oorsprong van de rechten van de mens |
Keywords | human rights, natural law, perfectionism, Stoa, Cicero |
Authors | René Brouwer |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Article |
De halve waarheid van het populisme |
Keywords | populism, self-inclusion, vitalism, democracy, Lefort |
Authors | Bert Roermund |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Does populism add value to the political debate by showing that the ideals of Enlightenment are too abstract and rationalist to understand politics in democratic terms? The paper argues two theses, critically engaging Lefort’s work: (i) instead of offering valuable criticism, populism feeds on the very principle that Enlightenment has introduced: a polity rests on self-inclusion with reference to a quasi-transcendent realm; (ii) populism’s appeal to simple emotions feeds on the vitalist (rather than merely institutionalist) pulse in any polity. Both dimensions of politics are inevitable as well as elusive. In particular with regard to the vitalist pulse we have no response to the half-truths of populism, as both national and constitutional patriotism seem on the wrong track. |
Article |
Techno-regulation and law: rule, exception or state of exception?A comment to Han Somsen and Luigi Corrias |
Keywords | code, citizenship, trans-generational justice, agency, ethics and politics |
Authors | Oliver W. Lembcke |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Luigi Corrias challenged Han Somsen’s plea for an effective regulation in the wake of an impending ecological catastrophe. This article takes up some of the arguments that have been exchanged: First, the paper criticises Corrias’s call for an ‘eco-logos’ as an ethical evasion of the political dimension that regulations aiming at a radical policy change necessarily entail. Secondly, it disputes the assumption that Somsen’s argument invites the notion of Carl Schmitt’s state of exception. Thirdly, the paper discusses the possible effects that code law might have on the concepts of agency (lack of autonomy) and citizenship (loss of justice). |
Miscellaneous |
Monotheïsme kan uw staat ernstige schade toebrengenPaul Cliteur, The Secular Outlook & Het monotheïstisch dilemma |
Authors | Wouter de Been |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Book review of Paul Cliteur, The Secular Outlook & Paul Cliteur, Het monotheïstisch dilemma |
Miscellaneous |
Elusive normativityStefano Bertea, The Normative Claim of Law |
Authors | Jaap Hage |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Book review of Stefano Bertea, The Normative Claim of Law |
Book Review |
Stefan Sottiaux, De Verenigde Staten van BelgiëReflecties over de toekomst van het grondwettelijk recht in de gelaagde rechtsorde |
Authors | Stefan Rummens |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Book review of Stefan Sottiaux, De Verenigde Staten van België |
Book Review |
Peter Rijpkema, Gijs van Donselaar, Bruno Verbeek, Henri Wijsbek (red.), Als vuurOpstellen voor Govert den Hartogh ter gelegenheid van zijn emeritaat |
Authors | Femke Storm and Jaap Zwart |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Book review of Peter Rijpkema, Gijs van Donselaar, Bruno Verbeek, Henri Wijsbek (red.), Als vuur |
Book Review |
Ronald Dworkin, Justice for Hedgehogs |
Authors | Iris van Domselaar |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Book review of Ronald Dworkin, Justice for Hedgehogs |