Thursday 16 October 2014

Post No. 602 - Human Dignity



The first point that needs to be made here is that no person can have human dignity who deprives another of their dignity, or lessens their dignity.

This makes the situation different to the situation of human rights, where one person may deprive another of human rights that the first still has - for instance, one may deprive another of freedom by a crime of kidnapping or abduction, and yet still maintain - even if only temporarily - the freedom of movement and association that they have deprived the other of.

To look at that instance from the point of view of human dignity, the person unwillingly deprived of the human right of freedom is also deprived of a portion of their inherent human dignity, as they are not able to be all that they can be, but so too is the criminal also a lesser person for having deprived another of their dignity.

In this sense, then, dignity is not “just” about respect, as the criminal may still receive respect if their crime is secret, but they are a less dignified human being.

This example also shows that what are considered human rights are a part of human dignity, and the United Nations Universals Declaration of Human Rights is probably still the best starting point for that, but human dignity goes beyond that, and beyond the measure others hold us in (i.e., respect) to something that is inherent. (And, for what it is worth, is also held by many other lifeforms, but that is a topic for some other post.)

Wikipedia [2] says - more or less - that dignity is about the right to be valued; I say it is more, and is about one’s values. The Wikipedia definition begins with the following:
Moral, ethical, legal, and political discussions use the concept of dignity to express the idea that a being has an innate right to be valued and to receive ethical treatment. In the modern context dignity can function as an extension of the Enlightenment-era concepts of inherent, inalienable rights. English-speakers often use the word "dignity" in proscriptive and cautionary ways: for example in politics it is usually[citation needed] used to critique the treatment of oppressed and vulnerable groups and peoples, but it has also been applied to cultures and sub-cultures, to religious beliefs and ideals, to animals used for food or research, and to plants. "Dignity" also has descriptive meanings pertaining to human worth, although there is no exact or agreed-upon definition of this worth. In general, the term has various functions and meanings depending on how the term is used and on the context.

The English word "dignity", attested from the early 13th century, comes from Latin dignitas (worthiness) by way of French dignité. In ordinary modern usage it denotes "respect" and "status", and it is often used to suggest that someone is not receiving a proper degree of respect, or even that they are failing to treat themselves with proper self-respect. There is also a long history of special philosophical use of this term. However, it is rarely defined outright in political, legal, and scientific discussions. International proclamations have thus far left dignity undefined, and scientific commentators, such as those arguing against genetic research and algeny, cite dignity as a reason but are ambiguous about its application.

The online Oxford Dictionary says dignity is “The state or quality of being worthy of honour or respect” (and is also about high position in society - which I have completely discounted from my considerations of this matter :) ). That is closer to the mark, but doesn’t say what the basis for respect or honour is. I propose that the basis is:

  • never lessening another’s dignity;
  • actively promoting human dignity;
  • never acting in contravention of others’ human rights;
  • actively respecting and promoting human rights;
  • seeking to be all that they can be, and to ensure that others also have the opportunity to choose to be all that they can be, if they wish to freely choose that; and
  • living in accordance with the principles of Balanced Positivity.

My definition is obviously biased towards my values, but if you take the last point off the list, I consider the list is pretty reasonable as a starting point for considering this topic.

Now, if we look at the loss of dignity, Wikipedia is more useful, perhaps:
Human dignity can be violated in multiple ways. The main categories of violations are:
     Humiliation
     Instrumentalization or objectification
     Degradation
     Dehumanization

Some of the practices that violate human dignity include torture, rape, social exclusion, labour exploitation, bonded labour and slavery.

Both absolute and relative poverty are violations of human dignity, although they also have other significant dimensions, such as social injustice. Involuntary poverty is unusual among violations of human dignity because it is usually the result of acts of omission rather than acts of commission. Absolute poverty is associated with overt exploitation and connected to humiliation (e.g., being forced to eat food from other people's garbage), but being dependent upon others to stay alive is a violation of dignity even in the absence of more direct violations. Relative poverty, on the other hand, is a violation because the cumulative experience of not being able to afford the same clothes, entertainment, social events, education, or other features of typical life in that society results in subtle humiliation, social rejection, and marginalization and consequently diminished self-respect.
All of this contravene the principles of Balanced Positivity, so my reason for including that is perhaps clearer …

Another way of putting this, perhaps, is that a loss of dignity is caused if mental or emotional harm is deliberately inflicted by another person. Harm could occur as a result of natural catastrophes, disease, etc, but I don’t see that as causing a loss of dignity - which suggests that dignity is a matter of human interactions and relations. That is, action, not just state of being.

So … human dignity:
is the inherently cumulative holistic combination of human rights, wellbeing and potential, and all actions or interaction which promote, realise or facilitate same. The converse also applies: whatever degrades, diminishes or robs humans of dignity, is inherently undignified.
Of course, exactly what constitutes things like wellbeing and potential can be argued, but I would rely on the Philosophy of Balanced Positivity to assess that. (Incidentally, free will is a fundamental human right, in my view.)

Let’s consider a few examples.

If someone is a troll, then, irrespective of whether or not they succeed in upsetting someone, they are intentionally attacking another person’s wellbeing, and thus intentionally attacking that person’s dignity, and thus unintentionally robbing themselves of their dignity.

If someone is on the receiving end of, say, abusive tweets and doesn’t criticise them, or argues against implementing human rights, or perhaps argues – as my nation’s Attorney-General did recently – that “people have the right to be bigots”, you are belittling other people’s potential: their potential to be better human beings, people who interact more constructively and thus have more inherent dignity. So ... not taking action means you lose some of your human dignity, along with the idiot(s) who directly did the wrong action. (There does come a point, however, when one has to look after one’s own wellbeing, so endlessly, automatically calling out all wrongdoing could lead to a loss of dignity through robing oneself of one’s wellbeing, rather than taking a more measured, balanced approach to “doing good”. This is a lesson I have had to learn the hard way.)

It is also possible for work – non-exploitative, properly recompensed, meaningful work – to be a source of dignity. On the other hand, someone who pushes people into exploitative or poorly paid work, is actively acting against human dignity – and thus robbing themselves of some of theirs.

Now all we need is for a good philosopher, someone like Brendan Myers perhaps, to take my rough scribble and transform it into something that is elegantly worded … SIGH – dream on woman, dream on … 




[1] BPLF = Balanced Positive (spiritual) Light Forces. See here and here for more on this.

[2] Please see here and my post "The Death of Wikipedia" for the reasons I now recommend caution when using Wikipedia. I'm also exploring use of h2g2, although that doesn't appear to be as extensive (h2g2 is intended - rather engagingly - to be the Earth edition of "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy").

Love, light, hugs and blessings


Gnwmythr, Wéofodthegn 
(pronounced "new-MYTH-ear"; ... aka Bellatrix Lux? … Morinehtar? … Would-be drýicgan ... )

My "blogiography" (list of all posts and guide as to how to best use this site) is here, and my glossary/index is here.

I started this blog to cover karmic regression-rescue (see here and here), and it grew ... See here for my group mind project, here and here for my "Pagans for Peace" project (and join me at 9 PM on Sunday, wherever you are, to meditate for peace), and here for my bindrune kit-bag. I also strongly recommend learning how to flame, ground and shield, do alternate nostril breathing, work with colour, and see also here and be flexible. 

I am a Walker upon the Path of Balanced Positivity, seeking Spiritual Maturity.
  • One size does NOT fit all.
  • Don't be mediocre - seek to excel.
  • Gnwmythr's Stropping Strap: Occam's Razor only works if  the simplest solution is actually recognised as being the simplest, rather than the one that best fits one's bigotries being labelled 'simplest'.
  • Our entire life experience, with all the many wondrous and varied people, places and events in it, is too small a sample for statistical reliability about Life.
  • May the world of commerce and business be recognised to be a servant, not a master, of the lives of people.
  • Ban the dream interpretation industry!
  • A home is for living in, not feeling, becoming or being rich or a “better” class than others.
  • Being accustomed to interacting via certain rules makes those rules neither right nor universal.
  • Like fire to the physical, emotions to the soul make a good servant, and a bad master.
  • Expertise at intimacy and emotional happiness is generally not the same thing as spiritual growth.
  • Any person, male or female, who has neither a serious health issue, dependents nor an agreement about study. yet expects their partner to work to support them, is, spiritually speaking, little more than a parasite.
  • The means shape the end.
  • BPLF restraint of uncooperatives is NOT an opportunity for revenge or getting even - even unconsciously.
  • As words can kill, the right to freedom of speech comes with a DUTY to be as well-informed, objective and balanced as you can be.
  • My favourite action movie of all time is "Gandhi", although I've recently come across "Invictus" and might put that one in to that category. However, I loathe the stereotypical action movie - and, for similar reasons, I loathe many dramas, which are often emotionally violent, more so in some cases than many war films.
  • All of the above - and this blog - could be wrong, or subject to context, perspective, or state of spiritual evolution ...
Do not pray for easy lives. Pray to be stronger [people].
John F. Kennedy (who was quoting 19th Century Episcopal Bishop Phillips Brooks)

Jesus loves you. Odin wants you to grow up.
(Facebook meme, according to John  Beckett)

We make our decisions. And then our decisions turn around and make us.
F.W. Boreham

Females, get over 'cute'. Get competent. Get trained. Get capable. Get over 'cute'. And those of you who are called Patty and Debby and Suzy, get over that. Because we use those names to infantalise females – we keep females in their 'little girl' state by the names we use for them. Get over it. If you want to be taken seriously, get serious.
Jane Elliott

The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good [people] to do nothing.
(based on writing by) Edmund Burke

The significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at when we created them.
Albert Einstein

We didn't inherit the Earth from our ancestors, we only borrowed it from our children
Antoine De Saint-Exupéry

Like an unchecked cancer, hate corrodes the personality and eats away its vital unity.
Martin Luther King, Jr.

True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it is not haphazard and superficial. It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring.
Martin Luther King, Jr.

Too much and too long, we seem to have surrendered community excellence and community values in the mere accumulation of material things. Our gross national product ... if we should judge America by that -- counts air pollution and cigarette advertising, and ambulances to clear our highways of carnage. ... Yet the gross national product does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages; the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures neither our wit nor our courage; neither our wisdom nor our learning; neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country; it measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile."
Robert F. Kennedy 1968

There are risks and costs to a program of action. But they are far less than the long-range risks and costs of comfortable inaction.
John F. Kennedy

If we could change ourselves, the tendencies in the world would also change. As a man changes his own nature, so does the attitude of the world change towards him. … We need not wait to see what others do. (Often degraded to “Be the change you want to see in the world” – see here)
Gandhi


Tags: about me, action, dignity, human rights, inaction, interactions,
First published: Thorsdagr, 16th October, 2014
Last edited (excluding fixing typo's and other minor matters): Thursday, 12th October, 2014