
Contents
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2.1 Introduction 2.1 Introduction
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2.2 Simone Weil's Critique of Human Rights 2.2 Simone Weil's Critique of Human Rights
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2.3 Why Human Rights Matter 2.3 Why Human Rights Matter
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2.4 Love as Community 2.4 Love as Community
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2.5 Conclusion 2.5 Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter singles out and discusses a particular problem – largely overlooked by dominant communitarian critiques of liberalism – with human rights through the writings and insights of Simone Weil. The primary theme in this chapter is the conceptual value of human rights as a medium to recognise and respond to human suffering. Through Simone Weil's writings, it discusses why love must be central to the design of any institution, especially human rights institutions and approaches that seek to take human suffering seriously. It concludes by showing how the African moral philosophical outlook on the value of community, among other things, is supportive of this inclination to love. African moral philosophy allows us to understand community itself as something that is constituted or founded upon expressions of love and empathy.
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