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Self‐Ownership and the Duty to Assist

journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-06, 22:17 authored by Jesse Spafford
Libertarians are attracted to the self-ownership thesis because it seems to satisfy four important theoretical desiderata. First, the thesis treats all persons equally by assigning them the same initial set of rights. Second, the thesis gives people the strongest set of ownership rights possible. Third, it assigns persons a determinate set of rights. And, finally, it grounds the libertarian rejection of a duty to assist, benefit, or rescue others. This article argues that these four desiderata cannot be simultaneously satisfied. Specifically, it contends that the first three desiderata can be jointly satisfied only if the thesis merely gives people the right to include their owned bodies in various actions (as opposed to a stronger version of the thesis that gives people permissions to do things with their bodies). However, such an interpretation of the thesis will not satisfy the final desideratum. Thus, libertarians face a tetralemma when defining the self-ownership thesis.

History

Preferred citation

Spafford, J. (2022). Self‐Ownership and the Duty to Assist. Journal of Applied Philosophy, 39(5), 857-869. https://doi.org/10.1111/japp.12595

Journal title

Journal of Applied Philosophy

Volume

39

Issue

5

Publication date

2022-11-01

Pagination

857-869

Publisher

Wiley

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2022-06-14

ISSN

0264-3758

eISSN

1468-5930

Language

en