The Ethics of the Unsaid in the Sphere of Human Rights

Louis E. Wolcher
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Abstract

The concept of human rights reacts to a world that is adikia (“unjust”), as the ancient Greeks put it, or out of joint. However, like the sound made by the tree that falls in the forest when no one is around to hear it, the disjointedness of the world remains invisible unless someone notices it as adikia, as unjust. “What the eye doesn’t see the heart doesn’t grieve over” (Wittgenstein). The ultimate ground of human rights is therefore ethical. The ethical intentionality of noticing and caring about the very real sufferings of others, not just representing them in words, constitutes the living origin of human rights. Only when concrete suffering is noticed can the abstract concepts and pragmatic maneuvers associated with human rights discourse be brought to bear on it. But there is a paradox here: since the concepts expressing the true do not and cannot express the totality of the real, intentionality’s aim is never completely on target. Although an excess of unsaid haunts every event of saying, the ignoble desire to forge a unanimous interpretation tempts us to ignore this excess. This essay claims that the role of ethics in connection with the justice of human rights is to defy the world’s course, whatever that course may be. Only by means of a relentless critique that always attends to the particular can the many abstractions of human rights discourse be prevented from becoming a farce, or worse.
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人权领域中未言者的伦理
正如古希腊人所说,人权的概念是对一个不公正(“不公正”)的世界的反应。然而,就像森林里的树倒下时没有人听到的声音一样,世界的脱节仍然是看不见的,除非有人注意到它是阿迪奇亚,是不公正的。“眼不见心不愁”(维特根斯坦)。因此,人权的最终基础是伦理的。注意和关心他人真正的痛苦,而不仅仅是用语言表现出来的道德意向性,构成了人权的活生生的起源。只有注意到具体的苦难,才能使与人权话语有关的抽象概念和务实手段对其产生影响。但这里有一个悖论:因为表达真实的概念没有也不可能表达真实的全部,意向性的目的从来没有完全达到。尽管过多的未言说困扰着每一个说的事件,但想要形成一个一致的解释的卑鄙欲望诱使我们忽略了这些多余的东西。这篇文章声称,伦理在人权正义方面的作用是挑战世界的进程,无论这个进程是什么。只有通过始终关注具体问题的无情批评,才能防止人权话语的许多抽象变成一场闹剧,或者更糟。
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