Orwell's 1984 Society and Human Rights

Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 1 (1-2):135-144 (1989)
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Abstract

In this article Alan Gewirth's theory of social ethics is applied to the picture of life presented in Orwell's novel, 1984, in such a way as to justify one's sense of repulsive evil therein. It is the systematic denial of human rights to freedom and well-being that is fundamentally immoral and destructive of the capacity of people to function as prospective purposive agents. This denial of what Gewirth terms additive, nonsubtractive, and basic goods violates both privacy and personal autonomy, reducing man to a sub-human level.

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Wayne P. Pomerleau
Gonzaga University

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