MeisterEckhart wrote on Feb 2
nd, 2026 at 3:22pm:
freediver wrote on Feb 2
nd, 2026 at 3:17pm:
Suppose you have a piece of home made papyrus, signed by everyone on the island in charcoal, and witnessed and ratified by the entire UN assembly, stating that you all have the right to walk along the beach.
But, the bloke who lives on the beach tries to kill you whenever he sees you.
Do you have the right to walk along the beach?
Can the people on the island use violence to restrain the bloke who lives on the beach in defence of my right to walk on the beach?
What if the tribe granted the right of all to walk on the beach, with a subclause which withdraws that right during the first week of the new moon after the vernal equinox?
It is irrelevant. The reality you face is that if you try to walk along the beach, he sees you and tries to kill you.
Do you have the right to walk along the beach?
Quote:Rights only exist within a societal contract where a societal force greater than yourself
I realise you are about to get as slippery as an eel, so let me skip to the end, pretending you had the spine to give a straight answer. This is where your argument is already falling apart. You already acknowledge here that the pieces of paper are irrelevant, and what matters is what the "societal force greater than yourself" allows you to get away with. And what is the best way to answer the question of what they allow you to get away with? Is it to spend your lifetime looking at pieces of paper and trying to second guess how they will act? Or is it simply to engage your brain and assess the reality you are faced with?
The societal force can take on a whole spectrum of forms, and the "alone on a desert island" is merely one very extreme end of that spectrum. "They" can still take away your rights, or grant you rights either explicitly or by not caring what you get up to, and whether it is codified or not only matters to the lawyers.