A. Right to life, liberty and property
B. Right to life, work and religion
C. Right to life, property and religion
D. Right to life, religion and family
The Rights
The Rights
A. It assumes that rights can exist independent of society
B. It holds that rights are static
C. It lists the rights which man brought with him from state of nature
D. It asserts that certain rights are basic and therefore necessary for human existence
A. There is no commonly agreed list of natural rights
B. The natural rights often conflict with each other
C. There is a universal agreement regarding the lists of natural rights
D. It assumes that rights can exist independent of state
A. Locke
B. Austin
C. Bentham
D. Grotius
A. The rights are the creation of state
B. The rights are natural and the state merely recognises them
C. The rights are prior to the state
D. The sights are fixed and static
A. The rights are granted to the individual by the state but it cannot take them back without the consent of the majority:
B. The rights are granted to the individual by the state and can be taken back by it
C. The state does not grant rights to the individual but can curtail his rights
D. The state neither grants rights to the individual nor can it restrict them
A. It attaches too much importance to moral rights
B. It noes not cover the whole field of rights
C. It concedes rights against the state
D. It attaches too much importance to the customs
A. Rights are the creation of God
B. Rights are drawn from various historical statutes
C. Rights are the crystallization of customs
D. Rights are the result of contract
A. Edward Gibbons
B. Herbert Spencer
C. Edmund Burke
D. Rousseau
A. Hobbes
B. Marx
C. T.H. Green
D. Bentham