Law and Morals – Rights
peace,
I have a question I've been struggling with about duties and rights in law and morality.
Simply put, a person does not steal an object belonging to his friend, since he has a legal obligation not to steal, and this is because the other person has a right to the object.
This means that in law my obligation is because of the right of the other. An object that the other has no right to, then it is a product for me to take. The obligation arises because the other has a right.
Therefore, in the event that my life is threatened, and I can save myself by stealing, it is still legally prohibited. After all, I have no legal right to the object.
Now on morality: I see someone drowning, I have a moral obligation to help them. why? Because the other has the right to live? How does that work?
And in the event that my life is threatened and I can save myself by stealing, then morally the other person has a duty to save me, on the other hand I have a legal prohibition not to steal, do I also have a moral right to take the object?
Is there symmetry in morality, as in theft?
I remember that the Rabbi said that the state has a duty to care for the disabled, but they do not have a right. Something like that. What does this mean, the state has a duty – why? In law, a duty is because the other has a right, right?
I wrote confused, because the subject is confusing to me. I hope the rabbi understands what I wrote, I would be very happy for a reasoned answer on this subject.
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