Acknowledgements
Introduction
1: Are there Natural Rights? 1: The Sceptical Tradition
2: Are there Natural Rights? 2: The Sceptical Critique and Rights
before 1776
3: Are there Natural Rights? 3: The Sceptical Critique and Rights
after 1776
4: Are there Natural Rights? 4: The Sceptical Critique and the
modern Roman Catholic Tradition
5: Are there Natural Rights? 5: The Sceptical Critique and
Contemporary Theories
6: What's Wrong with Subjective Rights?
7: Are there Absolute Rights?
8: Are Human Rights Universal?
9: What's Wrong with Rights in Ethics?
10: What's Wrong with (some) Judges? 1: Al-Skeini, Al-Jedda, Smith,
and the Fog of War
11: What's Wrong with (some) Judges? 2: Carter and the Invention of
a Right to 'Physician-assisted Dying'
12: What's Wrong with (some) Human Rights Lawyers?
Conclusion
Bibliography
Nigel Biggar, Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology, and Director of the McDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics, and Public Life, University of Oxford
a welcomed addition to the current discussion. Biggar's previous
work on the ethics of war gives him a unique angle to approach
cases of rights talk, focusing on specific instances such as
torture and killing in war. He makes a strong case for making
rights the conclusion of a process of moral consideration rather
than a foundational starting point to which everything else must
yield.
*Todd A. Scacewater, Journal of Language, Culture, and
Religion*
This is a scholarly book worth reading and a critique worth
constructively engaging with.
*Ethna Regan, Studies in Christian Ethics*
Courageous ... What's Wrong With Rights? is a rich and challenging
book. Not everyone will agree with Biggar's views, but anyone
writing about human rights who wishes to be taken seriously will
need to engage with his arguments.
*Jonathan Sumption, The Times*
I...commend this book for its clarity of reasoning and its
engagement with fundamental issues with which we should all be
discussing.
*John Duddington, Law and Justice*
A brilliant, provocative and intelligent book.
*Simon Heffer, The Daily Telegraph*
A thought-provoking work of scholarship... [a] compelling challenge
to sloppy rights-thinking.
*Craig Purshouse, Times Literary Supplement*
This encyclopaedic study provides a marvellous survey of the
complex field of rights and raises important questions as to the
growing use of rights language.
*R. Dean Drayton, International Journal of Public Theology*
...A powerfully reasoned intellectual history of the sceptical
tradition from the 1780s to the present day. [Biggar is] a
discriminating guide rather than an anti-rights ideologist, and his
analysis of these traditions is intricate, exacting and fair. While
clearly Christian in his perspective, he keeps claims from
authority, especially divine authority, firmly in their place
*Michael Ignatieff, Literary Review*
It is a rigorously reasoned argument and ... Biggar succeeds
brilliantly in deflating the inordinate claims made for rights
today...Along with being a profound study in moral and political
philosophy, this is also a devastating and highly topical attack on
the belief that ethical dilemmas can be resolved by 'an oligarchy
of judges' expanding existing rights and conjuring up new
ones...Over the past two decades, Biggar has produced a body of
work of the highest intellectual quality which has made him one of
the leading living Western ethicists.
*John Gray, New Statesman*
Quietly, cautiously, and with careful scholarly integrity,
Professor Biggar has derailed a gravy train. Should the UK withdraw
from the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights? Should
it repeal or redraft the Human Rights Act 1998 and the Equality Act
2010? The result would surely be petitions, denunciations, hostile
crowds, the toppling of statues, the banning of speakers,
self-righteous lawyers. But all this happens already; what is there
to lose? Thanks to Biggar, we see how much there is to gain. It is
time for philosophical arguments, won in the pages of this
important book, to be translated into legislation.
*Jonathan Clark, The Critic*
This scholarly, but nonetheless most readable, book makes an
important contribution to the debate about to be had when the UK
Government takes forward its promised (some would say threatened)
new Commission on the Constitution, Democracy and Human Rights. No
stranger to controversy, Professor Biggar argues in effect that the
assertion of human rights has got out of hand. He pulls no punches
and takes no prisoners. This is a penetrating examination of the
relationship between rights and responsibilities and reflects many
of the concerns expressed in Jonathan Sumption's 2019 Reith
Lectures.
*Lord Simon Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood*
What's Wrong With Rights? isone of the most remarkable scholarly
achievements I know of:it deftly addresses a wide variety of
theoretical and practical problems of great normative importance;
it engages with a vast and complex legal, philosophical, and
theological literature about the morality of rights; it articulates
plausible assessments of the most important contributions to that
literature; and perhaps most importantly, the topics it addresses
are at the very heart of political discourse in contemporary
liberal polities. I cannot recommend it more highly.
*Christopher Eberle, Professor of Philosophy at the United States
Naval Academy, Annapolis*
With the noble post-World War II human rights project increasingly
imperiled by misunderstanding and manipulation, Nigel Biggar's new
book is a major contribution to clear thinking about what we mean
when we speak of rights. Whether or not they agree with his
conclusions, friends of human rights everywhere should welcome this
timely and informative analysis of what's wrong with rights and
what needs to be done to put them right.
*Mary Ann Glendon, Learned Hand Professor of Law at Harvard
University and author of Rights Talk (1991)*
Despite its eye-catching title, this book is neither a rejection of
rights as such nor of natural morality, but a keen-eyed critique of
natural rights in particular. In a discussion both dazzlingly
wide-ranging and compellingly concrete, Nigel Biggar shows how
natural rights talk undermines appropriate acknowledgement of the
contingent, circumstantial character of political and ethical
judgments. We do well to recognize that rights are paradigmatically
legal and enrich ethical discourse by attending to virtues and
duties as much as to rights. What's Wrong with Rights is the most
significant Christian ethical contribution to reflection on rights
since Nicholas Wolterstorff's Justice: Rights and Wrongs.
*Jennifer Herdt, Gilbert L. Stark Professor of Christian Ethicsat
Yale Divinity School*
What's Wrong With Rights? is magisterial, combining theology,
intellectual history, and detailed attention to particular cases
and examples. Biggar is not afraid of making controversial
judgements and works towards them in a manner that is honest and
transparent, always commanding respect. At a deeper level, his book
invites the reader to engage in debates about rights, maybe to
disagree, but to do so from within a richer moral tradition, which
gives more opportunity for insight, nuance, and dissent. The
possibility arises of not only better judgements, but better
disagreements. Both robust and generous, this landmark book
represents a leading theological ethicist writing at the height of
his powers.
*Christopher Insole, Professor of Philosophical Theology and Ethics
at Durham University*
Rights talk has dominated public discourse for the past seventy
years. But our political disagreements are worse than ever. Nigel
Biggar not only explains what happened, he also proposes a
comprehensive way forward. We need to move beyond "rights
fundamentalism", and retrieve a richer public discourse that
emphasizes duty, virtue, and the concrete challenges facing a
political community. Crossing the boundaries of theology,
philosophy, history, and law, Biggar's incisive analysis shows why
talking about "natural rights" isn't helpful: defining, defending,
and balancing rights always requires well-functioning legal
institutions.
*Cathleen Kaveny, Darald and Juliet Libby Professor of Law and
Theology at Boston College*
What's Wrong with Rights?is a finely crafted review of the history
of rights and an insightful assessment of contemporary discussions
across a range of disciplines and contexts. Nigel Biggar raises
important basic questions for theology, ethics, and law, and this
book will reshape our ways of thinking about rights in all three
fields.
*Robin W. Lovin, Cary M. Maguire University Professor Emeritus of
Ethics at Southern Methodist University, Dallas*
This is a critique of one of most fashionable and incoherent
notions of our time, the idea that there are enforceable rights,
'natural' or 'human', that exist independently of collective human
choice. It is original, thought-provoking, and carefully reasoned.
Such rights have many supporters, and always will have. But they
should not be taken seriously unless they are willing to engage
with the ideas in this impressive book.
*Lord Jonathan Sumption, QC, former Justice of the Supreme Court of
the UK*
What's Wong With Rights? is a timely, wide-ranging, and
historically informed book that subjects the prevailing human
rights culture, in its various manifestations, to a strong dose of
Burkean scepticism. Philosophers will be provoked by his thesis
that rights are paradigmatically the creatures of law and form no
part of natural morality. Lawyers will be challenged by the
vigorous criticisms of what Biggar views as the illegitimate
employment of rights vocabulary as a mean of enforcing the moral
and political views of an "oligarchy of judges". This is an
iconoclastic book that deserves to be reckoned with in the serious
conversation about the nature and limits of rights that we
desperately need.
*John Tasioulas, Yeoh Professor of Politics, Philosophy, and Law at
King's College London*
This is a cleverly titled, crisply written, and largely clear-eyed
engagement with the history, concept, and limits of rights and
right talk in the Western tradition and beyond.Nigel Biggar brings
a big analytical mind and deft pen to the task — and a pair of
sharp elbows too. He engages a substantial library of human rights
scholarship and case law with critical acuity and philosophical
originality, concluding with a cautious and conditional endorsement
of rights.
*John Witte, Jr, Robert W. Woodruff Professor of Law and McDonald
Distinguished Professor, Emory University School of Law, and
Director of the Center for the Study of Law and Religion, Emory
University*
Biggar's method in discussing the intellectual history of rights is
to distil the most notable expressions of the 200-year-old British
tradition of scepticism about natural rights into a set of main
objections.
*Esther D. Reed, University of Exeter, Modern Believing*
Biggar's method in discussing the intellectual history of rights is
to distil the most notable expressions of the 200-year-old British
tradition of scepticism about natural rights into a set of main
objections.
*Esther D. Reed, University of Exeter, Modern Believing*
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