HREQ 2010 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Human Nature, Ancient Greek Philosophy, Immanuel Kant

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Human rights and human nature: the grounding of. Human nature is spoken of in different ways by all those who have a different perspectives. Main arguments of perspectives: humans are biological beings. That is, our physical nature or our bodies and genetic coding make us who we are. For example, we walk on two legs and we have developed a large brain. Schools of thought: evolutionary theory, biological determinism. (are criminals born?) Freudian psychoanalysis: humans are spiritual beings endowed with a soul. This religious perspective argues that humans have a unique spiritual substance that, in most cases, survives beyond the material life that we live. In the judeo-christian bible, for example, the claim is that humans are created in "god"s image. " This belief is grounded in the notion that we cannot something divine with us: humans are rational beings. This argument claims that humans are different from the other animals because they have the power of ratiocination or reasoning.

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