“In order to prevent a violation of the principle of nonmaleficence, every human being must be valued at the highest level of development, because attaching value to any lower level of development risks the possibility of undervaluing that human being (i.e., subjecting him to the classification of being "inferior" or "less than human"). This undervaluation, in turn, allows for a serious violation of the principle of nonmaleficence, that is, justifying killing, slavery, marginalization, isolation, etc., of this human being because the human being is thought to be "inferior" or "less than human.” LifePhilosophyHumanityPoliticsValueHuman RightsPhilosophy Quotes Book:Ten Universal Principles: A Brief Philosophy of the Life Issues Source: Ten Universal Principles: A Brief Philosophy of the Life Issues
“The United Nation's Universal Declaration of Human Rights follows the same intrinsic logic, namely, the power behind any constitution or charter is derived from the legitimate authority of a state; the legitimate authority of a state, in turn, rests upon a mandate to promote and protect freedom, justice, and peace; this mandate requires that every state recognize the natural rights and the intrinsic dignity of every human being (because freedom, justice, and peace cannot be achieved without the protection of natural rights). If any state fails to protect the natural rights of human beings, that state loses its legitimacy and its right to govern and can be legitimately rebelled against in the interest of justice, peace, and freedom.” GovernmentPoliticsHuman RightsPhilosophy QuotesUnited NationsRight To LifeNatural RightsIntrinsic RightsRight To HappinessRight To Liberty Book:Ten Universal Principles: A Brief Philosophy of the Life Issues Source: Ten Universal Principles: A Brief Philosophy of the Life Issues