Alan Dershowitz on the Origins of Human Rights at the 92nd Street Y Audiobook By Alan Dershowitz cover art

Alan Dershowitz on the Origins of Human Rights at the 92nd Street Y

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Alan Dershowitz on the Origins of Human Rights at the 92nd Street Y

By: Alan Dershowitz
Narrated by: Jeffrey Toobin
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About this listen

Where do "rights" come from? Professor Alan Dershowitz provides an entirely new resolution to this age-old dilemma: rights, he argues, do not come from God, nature, logic, or law alone, but from particular experiences with injustice, and from trial and error. He also touches on the rights of prisoners and the situation in the Middle East. His new book is Rights from Wrongs. Professor Dershowitz speaks with Jeffrey Toobin, CNN legal analyst and New Yorker staff writer.

This event took place on December 12, 2004.

Listen to Alan Dershowitz's The Case for Peace.©2005 92 nd Street Young Men's and Young Women's Hebrew Association (P)2005 92 nd Street Young Men's and Young Women's Hebrew Association
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Editorial reviews

Renowned lawyer, jurist, and political commentator Alan Dershowitz reflects on the nature of human rights in this 92nd Street Y seminar. Dershowitz knows a thing or two about rights, having worked on precedent-setting cases regarding genocide, hate crimes, censorship, and defamation. Here, however, Dershowitz looks beyond mere law books, and attempts to situate human rights in a context that is more fundamental. Dershowitz argues that rights are a product of humanity’s ability to recognize incredible injustice - as in the case of the Holocaust or American slavery - and learn from its experiences and mistakes. Reflecting on the status of civil liberties in post 9/11 America, the legal expert is dour and forthright, warning listeners that "the first casualty of fear is often rights".

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    4 out of 5 stars

Bonkers

This is an excellent opportunity to see how brilliant men can hold such foolish ideas. Alan Dershowitz is simply amazing in his ability to communicate clearly his false, relativist based notion that human rights are derived or agreed upon by experience. His thoughts are so far from the truth that you have to hear it from his own mouth to believe that he actually said it. This was great to listen to but in no way should be taken as fact.

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