The Sacred Nature of Human Rights: Vladimir Solovyov’s 1898 Saint Petersburg Speech

Jusgov Research Paper Series 2024 (19):1-13 (2024)
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Abstract

The point of this paper is to show that the understanding Solovyov penned and voiced about humanity close to the end of his life suggests that he regarded human rights as sacred. First of all, we provided a rough sense of who Solovyov was as a person, for he is a bit of a stranger to the majority of the audience, including scholars, in the Western hemisphere. Afterwards, we carried out what we have already said we intended to do here, drawing on a public lecture that Solovyov gave at Saint Petersburg Imperial University to mark the 100th anniversary of Auguste Comte’s birth. Our perception is that Solovyov clearly thought of human rights from a faith-based angle and believed them to be sacred, and that all of his insights and those inspired by them are remarkably conducive to reflecting on human rights at the present time, whatever the religious background of each one of us.

Author's Profile

Robert Junqueira
Faculty of Arts and Humanities of The University of Coimbra

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