Abortion, marriage and cognate problems

In Liberalism with Excellence, Matthew Kramer argues that liberal neutrality cannot adjudicate issues such as abortion, and he intimates that this problem extends to “cognate problems” such as euthanasia, animal rights and (more unexpectedly) same-sex marriage. In this Article, I examine the sense i...

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Autor principal: Laborde, C
Formato: Journal article
Idioma:English
Publicado em: Oxford University Press 2018
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author_facet Laborde, C
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description In Liberalism with Excellence, Matthew Kramer argues that liberal neutrality cannot adjudicate issues such as abortion, and he intimates that this problem extends to “cognate problems” such as euthanasia, animal rights and (more unexpectedly) same-sex marriage. In this Article, I examine the sense in which marriage is a cognate problem to abortion. I suggest that liberal neutrality is indeterminate, not only about the identification of rights-bearing natural persons, but also about the identification of justice-apt social practices. I argue that the resolution of many political-moral controversies depend on contested social ontologies—claims about the nature and moral status of the particular groups and relationships that individuals form—and I illustrate this claim by reference to the rights of religious association.
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spelling oxford-uuid:cbef7e7c-1574-4996-a21a-e291e41430cf2022-03-27T07:18:18ZAbortion, marriage and cognate problemsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:cbef7e7c-1574-4996-a21a-e291e41430cfEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordOxford University Press2018Laborde, CIn Liberalism with Excellence, Matthew Kramer argues that liberal neutrality cannot adjudicate issues such as abortion, and he intimates that this problem extends to “cognate problems” such as euthanasia, animal rights and (more unexpectedly) same-sex marriage. In this Article, I examine the sense in which marriage is a cognate problem to abortion. I suggest that liberal neutrality is indeterminate, not only about the identification of rights-bearing natural persons, but also about the identification of justice-apt social practices. I argue that the resolution of many political-moral controversies depend on contested social ontologies—claims about the nature and moral status of the particular groups and relationships that individuals form—and I illustrate this claim by reference to the rights of religious association.
spellingShingle Laborde, C
Abortion, marriage and cognate problems
title Abortion, marriage and cognate problems
title_full Abortion, marriage and cognate problems
title_fullStr Abortion, marriage and cognate problems
title_full_unstemmed Abortion, marriage and cognate problems
title_short Abortion, marriage and cognate problems
title_sort abortion marriage and cognate problems
work_keys_str_mv AT labordec abortionmarriageandcognateproblems