MNb wrote on 11/08/08 at 21:01:41:
You still haven't explained what - for a democracy - is the difference between a social contract and a constitution, so this statement is premature. You haven't given one example of a social contract that isn't a constitution.
I'll just use a Hobbes example:
In Monarchies the social contract is established, decided upon, and changed by the King.
In such a model, there are no guaranteed rights to the constituents, as they are subject to the arbitrary whims of an indivudal. Therefore, it is not a constitution (refer to merriam-webster).
A social contract doesn't have to guarantee rights, unlike a constitution.
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Strange. I always thought my human rights were guaranteed in the Dutch respectively the Surinamese constitution. I also always have thought that in dictatorships the average citizen had no human rights at all, being at the mercy of the arbitrariness of the actual power, that does not bother either about a social contract or its regulations. That's probably why you failed to answer my question about Louis XIV to Hitler. I could have added Pol Pot.
In dictatorships the rights of the people are whatever the dictator says they are. There are no guarantees.
Human rights are completely arbitrary, dependent entirely upon the society.
Hitler gave rights to some people, and removed rights from other. He held power over the social contract. There was never any guarantees, and there never are with dictators. That's why it is a social contract, and not a constitution.
That effectively kills your notion about all constitutions being social contracts.
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Nice, that's exactly one of the conditions I recognized for a working constitution in my previous post.
Any model that can maintain power
works. Constitutions aren't unique in this regard, nor are they the only means of determining rights.
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Now I am quite allergic to metaphysics, as it way too often leads to abstract bla bla without any relation to daily reality. The idea of the social contract is imo a fine example. As you have failed to explain the difference between a constitution and a social contract I must assume that you use the idea the same way Hobbes did: to justify a political system you like for one reason or another.
A constitution
is a social contract, just as there are other versions of social contract.
Social contracts aren't a means of
justifying anything, they are simply means of explaining the
how part of right's "existance".
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Reject - in a philosophical way - the idea of the social contract and your justification becomes meaningless. Anyhow, I don't feel bound in any way by any social contract. As a result I feel free to pursue the change of the constitution of the country I live in in any way I prefer. I don't need metaphysics of any kind for this. Metaphysics never has brought any political change; building power has, so I concentrate on the latter.
You can reject the idea all you want, it still leaves you with no valid way to explain the means by which
rights become reified.
Metaphysics reflects itself in everything based on intangible concepts - rights, ethics, morals, laws, justice. Do I need to go on? All of them require reification, which is a metaphysical issue.
You may not feel bound by your social contract, but if you violate it, you will be punished. Good luck with that. If you truly weren't bound, you wouldn't be punished for violating it.
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Back to the origin of this. There are several arguments pro decentralization, ie transferring power from the Federal Government to the seperate states. There also arguments against it. These usually have to do with the scale of particular problems, that need a power of a similar scale.
The question what the ideal balance is has been actual in Europe last few years as well. Referring to a socalled social contract imo does not help answering it.
Assuming some kind of
ideal balance (such a concept doesn't exist, as ideals don't exist, it's a relativistic issue determined by an individual) has been achieved, barring substantial amendments to the Constitution of the United States, it is no more noteworthy than sharia law in the Middle East.
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My conclusion is that the social contract is a meaningless idea I'd rather do about. Until you give the idea some practical meaning I stick to this.
The practical meaning has been explained, and you've simply chosen to ignore it.
Social contract is the means by which human rights obtain reification, as they do not exist without it. This occurs in any model of governing, and extends from granting no rights, all the way through complete freedom. Social contract does not make the guarantees that a constitution does. It can, but is by no means obligatory.