Elmarnieh wrote:
Yes it was actually limited to that. When the concept of rights existed when the word was first applied in this way in philosophy it hadn't expanded at all passed that. If we want to ignore what words mean then people have a "right to not be offended" because hell the word means what people want it to mean and by that it always means whats good for them.
Whether people have a certain right has nothing to do with whether that definition of the word is correct. You are appealing to tradition, appealing to consequences, and engaging in special pleading for the word "rights". Many words have multiple definitions and uses; "Rights" is not special because of its political consequences.
It has nothing to do with what people "want"; one individual cannot simply pronounce a word to mean what he wants, nor do people get into groups to sit down and assign meanings. It matters how society customarily uses the word. The appropriate time to argue that rights should only be used in the narrow fashion you want was around 200 years ago. You're too late now.
To put it more clearly, if someone says "I have a right not to be offended", that sentence has an understandable meaning to me, and practically everyone else. That is a legitimate use of the word "rights". You understand it well enough. That does not mean I, or anyone else, agree with it. What you are trying to do is have it both ways; claim that the use of the word is wrong and the sentence therefore doesn't mean anything, and that some other nonexistent word should have been used in its place. The reason you are doing this, transparently, is because no such word exists and you are trying to take away the ability of other people to discuss the issue
at all by meanings of linguistic rules-lawyering, forcing them to sue as-yet-unrecognized words to express themselves and look foolish in the process.
This is not unlike your "I don't have to prove rights exist; they're intangible." No, but like any other philosophy you do have to explain your starting assumptions. You also do not get to dictate that other people use your assumptions in conversation, especially when you won't explain them. You can just say "well I won't discuss anything if we can't agree on assumptions, and we won't be able to agree if everyone doesn't agree to mine, because I won't budge" but since you never want to explain them in detail, no one will ever agree to them, since what you are effectively doing is asking people to agree to
hidden assumptions that you can alter at a whim any time the discussion doesn't go the way you want it.