Some Intellectual and Social Roots of Modern Human Rights Ideas
My purpose here is to identify selected turning points of western thought as they interacted with critical turning points in social organization, to shape the "deep trajectory" of social presupposition necessary for the rise of modern, Western principles of human rights. The deeply religio...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal for the scientific study of religion 1981-12, Vol.20 (4), p.301-309 |
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container_title | Journal for the scientific study of religion |
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creator | Stackhouse, Max L. |
description | My purpose here is to identify selected turning points of western thought as they interacted with critical turning points in social organization, to shape the "deep trajectory" of social presupposition necessary for the rise of modern, Western principles of human rights. The deeply religious aspects of both thought and societal structure are involved at each juncture. In the process of exhuming these presuppositions from the Western traditions, several questions arise for the scientific study of religion, and for the relationship of scholarship to the ethical basis of modern civilization. |
doi_str_mv | 10.2307/1386179 |
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issn | 0021-8294 1468-5906 |
language | eng |
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source | Jstor Complete Legacy; Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online |
subjects | Christian ethics Christianity Human Rights Humans Idea/Ideas/Ideational Islam Judaism Moral principles Religious equality Theology Universalism |
title | Some Intellectual and Social Roots of Modern Human Rights Ideas |
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