Stanford University |
"Although the preservationist regime of rights had come into existence by the late sixteenth century, it did not immediately become dominant in the Western world. To the contrary, many of the most sophisticated and influential writers of the day, [namely Hobbes and Locke,] associating it with the horrors of Reformation-era religious warfare, sought either to refute it or to establish the right to resist oppression on other, less volatile grounds. . . .
"When American and French revolutionaries declared that men (but not women) possessed inalienable, universal rights, they were [thus] not building on Hobbes and Locke. They were reactivating a very different concept of rights that had arisen on the European continent two centuries earlier."
David A. Bell, summarizing Dan Edelstein, On the spirit of rights (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2019), in "The many lives of liberalism," The New York review of books 66, no. 1 (January 17, 2019): 26 (24-27).