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    If coercion is constitutive of rights, it cannot be secon... — Carmelics
    Home/Rights & Liberty
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    Challenges→Locke's view that coercive power is merely a secondary feature of the civil state is mistaken.

    If coercion is constitutive of rights, it cannot be secondary to the civil state.

    Rights & LibertySocial Contract
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    Rights & LibertySocial Contract

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    For Kant, coercion is part of the idea of rights itself, not a supplementary enf...For Locke and his contemporary followers, coercive power is secondary — needed o...Locke's view that coercive power is merely a secondary feature of the civil stat...

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    Legitimacy of the civil state must therefore account for the coercive ...89%Therefore, coercion is part of the idea of rights itself.88%For Kant, coercion is part of the idea of rights itself, not a supplem...88%Locke's view that coercive power is merely a secondary feature of the ...87%

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    The civil state, according to Kant, establishes the rights necessary to secure equal freedom. Unlike for Locke and his contemporary followers, however, coercive power is not a secondary feature of the civil state, necessary to back up laws. According to Kant, coercion is part of the idea of rights. The thought can be explained as follows. Coercion is defined as a restriction of the freedom to pursue one’s own ends. Any right of a person—independently of whether it is respected or has been violat

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