Human Rights, Human Dignity, and Human Experience
Document Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
2013
Abstract
From the Publisher
The contested understandings of human dignity today make it very problematic as a reliable principle for determining the scope and merit of particular claims of human rights (at least beyond the principle’s narrow, universally agreed-upon core meaning). Merely relying on an overlapping consensus is insufficient. Nevertheless, the beginnings of a broader shared understanding of the meaning and implications of human dignity, as a foundational principle of human rights law, can emerge from our concrete experience. As a common point of reference for critically evaluating and integrating the diversity of instantiations of human rights in differing legal traditions, the elementary experience of human dignity leads us to regard law as a vehicle for sustained and reasoned reflection on the value of human persons and on the scope of our obligations to respect and protect them.
Recommended Citation
Carozza, Paolo G., "Human Rights, Human Dignity, and Human Experience" (2013). Book Chapters. 85.
https://scholarship.law.nd.edu/book_chapters/85
Publication Information
in Understanding Human Dignity 615 (Christopher McCrudden ed., 2013).