Chapter 3 Flashcards
➢Definitions of justice and the 4 notions
Justice is related to morality as part to a whole, and... generally involves related notions of: - fairness - equality - desert - rights
(a) Aristotle on justice as fairness:
(b) Mill on justice as a a moral right
(a) Aristotle on justice as fairness: Treat similar cases alike except where there is some relevant difference.
(b) Mill on justice as a moral right: Justice implies something that is not only right to do, and wrong not to do, but something that an individual can claim from us as a moral right.
Approaches to reconciling rival principles of justice:
- Michael Walzer’s approach
- Mill’s argument
- Utilitarianism
➢Michael Walzer’s approach: The idea that different distribution principles depend on implicit social norms.
➢ Mill argued that rival principles of justice can be reconciled only on the basis of the principle of utility, such as through considerations of the general well-being.
➢Utilitarianism does not tell us which economic system will produce the most happiness.
(3) The Nature of Justice
➢Five rival principles of distribution:
(a) Each an equal share.
(b) Each according to individual need.
(c) Each according to personal effort.
(d) Each according to social contribution.
(e) Each according to merit.
Some philosophers argue that principles are applicable in some circumstances and not in others – but it is not always clear how to reconcile two or more rival principles in the same circumstances.
(2) The Utilitarian View
➢Deciding which system will promote most happiness depends on knowing: 5 things:
1) The type of economic ownership.
2) The form of production and distribution.
3) The type of authority arrangements.
4) The range and character of material incentives.
5) The nature and extent of social security and welfare provisions.
Distinctive utilitarian ideals:
(a) Worker participation:
(b) Greater equality of income:
a) Worker participation: In his Principles of Political Economy (1848), Mill argued for the formation of labor and capital partnerships promoting equality between workers and industrialists.
(b) Greater equality of income: Utilitarians are more likely to favor equal income distribution on the basis of the so-called declining marginal utility of money.
(1) The Libertarian View
➢The principle of liberty
➢Nozick’s theory of justice
➢The principle of liberty: Libertarians refuse to restrict individual liberty even if doing so would increase overall happiness.
➢Nozick’s theory of justice: Nozick developed an influential statement of the libertarian position in his book Anarchy, State, and Utopia, based on the idea of negative and natural rights borrowed from the writings of the British philosopher John Locke (1632–1704).
➢The idea of Lockean negative and natural rights: The idea amounts to (1) non-interference with the way others choose to live or act, and (2) the ownership of those rights prior to any social and political institution.
2) The Libertarian View
➢Nozick’s entitlement theory:
2) The Libertarian View
➢Nozick’s entitlement theory: Nozick maintains that people are entitled to their holdings (that is, goods, money, and property) as long as they have acquired them fairly.
3 Principles of Nozick’s entitlement theory:
1) A person who acquires a holding in accordance with the principle of justice in acquisition is entitled to that holding.
2) A person who acquires a holding in accordance with the principle of justice in transfer, from someone else entitled to the holding, is entitled to the holding.
3) No one is entitled to a holding except by (repeated) applications of statements 1 and 2.
3 Distinctive libertarian ideals:
Distinctive libertarian ideals:
1) Liberty: Libertarians support economic laissez-faire (no govt interference), even if the point is to enhance the performance of the economy.
2) Free markets: Libertarians don’t contend that people morally deserve what they get in a free market, but only that they are entitled to it.
3) Property rights: For libertarians, property rights exist prior to any social systems and legislative acts, reflecting one’s initial appropriation of a product or exchange between consenting adults.
Criticisms of libertarian property rights:
Criticisms of libertarian property rights:
1) Property includes more than material objects. It also has many abstract forms.
2) Property ownership is not a simple right but involves a bundle of different rights.
Two important features of Rawls’s Theory of Justice:
Two important features of Rawls’s theory:
1) The hypothetical-contract approach.
2) The principles of justice that Rawls derives through it
Process of Rawls’s Theory of Justice
1) The original position: thought experiment – individuals choose the principles of justice that should govern them prior to any existing political or social arrangement.
2) The nature of the choice: Each individual will choose the set of principles best for him/herself (and loved ones).
3) The veil of ignorance: To avoid disagreement with others while pursuing one’s self-interest, all circumstances and conditions that can influence one’s choice of principles of justice (economic background, talents, privileges, etc.) ought to be removed.
4) Once the basis for bias is eliminated, the groundwork for a choice of fair principles of justice is established.
Outcome of Rawls’s Theory
Choosing the principles: Regardless of their particular interests, people in the original position will want more, rather than less, of the so-called primary social goods (income and wealth, rights, liberties, opportunities, status, and self-respect).
People in the original position will also choose conservatively, by trying to maximize the minimum that they will receive.
The two principles of Rawls’s Theory of Jusice:
The two principles:
1) Each person is to have an equal right to the most extensive total system of equal basic liberties, compatible with a similar system of liberty for all.
2) Social and economic inequalities are to satisfy two conditions: To be attached to positions open to all under conditions of fair equality of opportunity, and to give the greatest expected benefit to the least advantaged members of society (difference principle)