Most of that is pretty uncontroversial stuff, and except for one aspect of what you say I agree with you. The fly in the ointment is the implication that there is a right of freedom of action that may be defended against infringement by others in nature. There is not. Nature, be it flora or fauna, will infringe on that alleged right left, right and centre. One species of plants will displace another one a regular and routine basis, and just as often one plant will displace another plant of the same species. In many animal organisations alpha males arrogate the right to fertilise females in oestrus to the exclusion of other males. Their role as alpha males is repeatedly contested by pretenders. While the challenges are often ritualised, they usually involve brute force. Females in oestrus have next to no say about having sex, and what little they do have either involves forceful resistance or flight. There is no right as such - just practice as developed by evolution - and even if one allows for the sake of the argument that there is such a thing as a right in nature it can hardly be described as "a freedom of action that may be defended against infringement by others".Seth wrote:If a "right" is a freedom of action that may be defended against infringement by others, then the conflict of rights is what occurs when two organisms vie for the same resource, and the adjudication of which organism will win the use of the resource is the natural basis for all social systems that follow, from the very simple Law of the Jungle to the most complex of human or animal societies. Social organization requires rules of behavior and conduct to exist, and such rules may be simple or exceedingly complex, and they may be instinctive and genetically programmed or philosophical constructs, but they all derive from the same fundamental organic need for organization in order to advance and enhance the survival of the species. This is as true of human beings as it is of ants or wolves.
You start off with the premise "a right is a freedom of action that may be defended against infringement by others", follow it with premise "therefore it is a right that is based on nature and biological" and conclude that therefore the right to freedom of action that may be defended against infringement by others is based on nature and biological. The circularity is palpable and the first premise is manifestly wrong.
Seeing that your above argument is central to your ideology I am under no illusion that you will concede that there it contains two fatal errors. Instead, I expect another wall of words from you with which you attempt to explain how you are completely right and everyone who disagrees with you on that matter is just wrong, and I am confident that you will have done an excellent, logically faultless job of it because, as always, it originates from your superior intellect.