this is a sort of novel follow up to a question i asked previously, which was
your opinion on right of nature laws, which recognize natural entities as having
“personhood” or legal rights comparable to humans
[https://beehaw.org/post/11587201?scrollToComments=true]. Berry was a theologian
who wrote extensively on the rights of nature and ecology generally. one of his
lasting works are his 10 principles as enumerated in The Origin, Differentiation
and Role of Rights
[https://www.ties-edu.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Thomas-Berry-rights.pdf],
which are: 1. Rights originate where existence originates. That which determines
existence determines rights. 2. Since it has no further context of existence in
the phenomenal order, the universe is self-referent in its being and
self-normative in its activities. It is also the primary referent in the being
and activities of all derivative modes of being. 3. The universe is a communion
of subjects, not a collection of objects. As subjects, the component members of
the universe are capable of having rights. 4. The natural world on the planet
Earth gets its rights from the same source that humans get their rights, from
the universe that brought them into being. 5. Every component of the Earth
community has three rights. The right to be, the right to habitat, and the right
to fulfill its role in the ever-renewing process of the Earth community. 6. All
rights are species specific and limited. Rivers have river rights. Birds have
bird rights. Insects have insect rights. Humans have human rights. Difference of
rights is qualitative not quantitative. The rights of an insect would be of no
use to a tree or fish. 7. Human rights do not cancel out the rights of other
modes of being to exist in their natural state. Human property rights are not
absolute. Property rights are simply a special relationship between a particular
human “owner” and a particular piece of “property” for the benefit of both. 8.
Species exist in the form of individuals and groupings–flock, herds, schools of
fish and so forth. Rights refer to individuals and groupings, not simply in a
general way to species. 9. These rights as presented here establish the
relationships that the various components of the Earth have toward each other.
The planet earth is a single community bound together with interdependent
relationships. Every component of the Earth community is immediately or
mediately dependent on every other member of the Community for the nourishment
and assistance it needs for its own survival. This mutual nourishment, which
includes predator-prey relationship, is integral with the role that each
component of the Earth has within the comprehensive community of existence. 10.
In a special manner humans have not only a need for but a right of access to the
natural world, not only to supply their physical needs but also to provide the
wonder needed by human intelligence, the beauty needed by human imagination, and
the intimacy needed by the human emotions.
For those of you here who aren’t subscribed to !chat there is a discussion about Thomas Berry’s 10 Principles of Rights.
Here’s a snippet to whet your appetite: “Every component of the Earth community has three rights: the right to be, the right to habitat, and the right to fulfill its role in the ever-renewing process of the Earth community.”