The hermeneutics of dignity: on disability, defiance, and death

Journal of Global Ethics 16 (3):316-325 (2020)
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Pablo Gilabert’s Human Dignity and Human Rights offers an excellent, and welcome, defense of human dignity as a foundational concept for theorizing about human rights. In this paper, I defend the thought that concepts such as human dignity have an inescapably interpretive character, resting upon particular interpretations of human acts and lives. I defend this conclusion in three distinct domains: disability, which looks to the question of how to understand the relationship between dignity and a particular physical or mental impairment; defiance, which treats of how we ought to understand unsuccessful resistance to injustice; and death, and the question of how we might ascribe dignity to lives after they have ended.

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The Minority Body: A Theory of Disability.Elizabeth Barnes - 2016 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
The Uniqueness of the Holocaust.Avishai Margalit & Gabriel Motzkin - 1996 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 25 (1):65-83.

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