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    Promisees have an interest in the performance of the prom... — Carmelics
    Home/Rights & Liberty
    HistoryEditSee Inverse

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    Supports→A promisee has a right against the promisor

    Promisees have an interest in the performance of the promise, or an interest in being able to form voluntary bonds with others

    Rights & Liberty
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    Rights & Liberty

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    A promisee has a right against the promisorThe function of a right is to further the right-holder's interests

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    It is part of the very idea of a promise that the promisee already has...73%

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    SEP: rights
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    Interest theorists disagree. Interest theorists maintain that the function of a right is to further the right-holder’s interests. An owner has a right, according to the interest theorist, not because owners have choices, but because the ownership makes owners better off. A promisee has a right because promisees have some interest in the performance of the promise, or (alternatively) some interest in being able to form voluntary bonds with others. Your rights, the interest theorist says, are the

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