Opting Out: Conscience and Cooperation in a Pluralistic Society

D. Oderberg
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

We live in a liberal, pluralistic, largely secular society where, in theory, there is fundamental protection for freedom of conscience generally and freedom of religion in particular. There is, however, both in statute and common law, increasing pressure on religious believers and conscientious objectors (outside wartime) to act in ways that violate their sincere, deeply held beliefs. This is particularly so in health care, where conscientious objection is coming under extreme pressure. I argue that freedom of religion and conscience need to be put on a sounder footing both legislatively and by the courts, particularly in health care. I examine a number of important legal cases in the UK and US, where freedom of religion and conscience have come into conflict with government mandates or equality and anti-discrimination law. In these and other cases we find one of two results: either the conscientious objector loses out against competing rights, or the conscientious objector succeeds, but due to what I consider unsound judicial reasoning. In particular, cases involving cooperation in what the objector considers morally impermissible according to their beliefs have been wrongly understood by some American courts. I argue that a reasonable theory of cooperation incorporated into judicial thinking would enable more acceptable results that gave sufficient protection to conscientious objectors without risking a judicial backlash against objectors who wanted to take their freedoms too far. I also venture into broader, more controversial waters concerning what I call freedom of dissociation – the fundamental right to withdraw from associating with people, groups, and activities. It is no more than the converse of freedom of association, which all free societies recognise as a basic right. How far should freedom of dissociation go? What might society be like if freedom of dissociation were given more protection in law than it currently has? It would certainly give freedom of religion and conscience a substantial foundation, but it could also lead to discriminatory behaviour to which many people would object. I explore some of these issues, before going back to the narrower area of freedom of conscience and religion in health care, making some proposals about how the law could strengthen these basic pillars of a liberal, free society.
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选择退出:多元化社会中的良心与合作
我们生活在一个自由、多元、基本上是世俗的社会中,在这个社会中,从理论上讲,一般的良心自由,特别是宗教自由受到基本保护。然而,在成文法和普通法中,对宗教信徒和出于良心拒服兵役者(除战争时期外)施加的压力越来越大,迫使他们以违背他们真诚、根深蒂固的信仰的方式行事。在医疗保健领域尤其如此,出于良心拒服兵役正面临着极大的压力。我认为,宗教自由和良心自由需要在立法和法庭上得到更坚实的基础,特别是在医疗保健方面。我研究了英国和美国的一些重要法律案件,在这些案件中,宗教自由和良心自由与政府命令或平等和反歧视法发生了冲突。在这些和其他案例中,我们发现了两种结果之一:要么是出于良心拒服兵役者在与之竞争的权利中失败,要么是出于良心拒服兵役者成功了,但这是由于我认为不健全的司法推理。特别是,一些美国法院错误地理解了涉及反对者根据其信仰认为在道德上不允许的合作的案件。我认为,将合理的合作理论纳入司法思维,将会产生更可接受的结果,为出于良心拒服兵役者提供充分的保护,而不会冒着对那些想要过度行使自由的拒服兵役者产生司法反弹的风险。我还将涉足更广泛、更有争议的领域,我称之为“分离自由”,即脱离与人、团体和活动联系的基本权利。它只不过是结社自由的反面,所有自由社会都承认结社自由是一项基本权利。解离自由应该走多远?如果分离自由在法律上得到比现在更多的保护,社会会是什么样子?它当然会给宗教自由和良心自由一个坚实的基础,但它也可能导致许多人反对的歧视行为。我探讨了其中的一些问题,然后回到医疗保健中的良心自由和宗教自由这个狭窄的领域,就法律如何加强自由、自由社会的这些基本支柱提出了一些建议。
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