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Values, Rights, and Justice

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'The Aristotelian principle': each human being should develop his/her personality ... realization is, of course, not unimportant, I believe that the very possibility ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Values, Rights, and Justice


1
Values, Rights, and Justice
2
GDJ demands a distribution of X according to some
principles of justice
  • What is X?
  • What is the object of distribution?
  • What is important? (for a good human life?
  • What resources?

3
Rawls answer a thin theory of value (liberal)
  • The Aristotelian principle each human being
    should develop his/her personality/potential
  • primary goods (liberty and opportunity, income
    and wealth, bases of self-respect) necessary
    means to realise ones life plan

4
Critique of a thin theoryAmartya Sen and Martha
Nussbaum
  • 1. Neo-classical economic theory BNP/Capita,
    says nothing about level of
  • education
  • employment
  • health
  • equality

5
Critique from Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum
  • A theory of capabilities
  • Necessary means for any human beings development
    and flourishing
  • Capability represents freedom, whereas primary
    goods tell us only about the means to freedom
  • health, education, work, liberty, influence,
    community

6
UNDPHuman Development Index
  • Composite measure of three dimensions of human
    development life expectancy (health) adult
    literacy (education) purchasing power (standard
    of living)
  • But not democracy, equality, environment

7
(No Transcript)
8
Capabilities (health, education) rights (valid
claims)
  • Rights imply duties
  • 1. Duties not to prevent P to have access to
    rights
  • 2. Duties to protect Ps rights
  • 3. Duties to enforce Ps rights

9
Whos duties?
  • anyone who has the power
  • nations,
  • global organisations,
  • corporations

10
Argument against the idea of global
redistribution
  • Does not take effort and ambition into
    consideration, for example
  • luxury consumption or huge military budgets
  • elites in poor countries line their pockets
  • If the theory is not sensitive to efforts the
    persons own choice will not matter.

11
Thomas Nagels objection
  • there are strong moral reasons for the demand of
    global justice, but
  • the wealthy nations also have legitimate reasons
    to resist a radical drop in the standard of
    living as a consequence of an implementation of
    principles of global justice

12
  • Is it really possible to realise global justice?
  • Is it not just a utopian dream?

13
Rawls, 1999
  • While realization is, of course, not unimportant,
    I believe that the very possibility of such a
    social order can itself reconcile us to the
    social world. The possibility is not a mere
    logical possibility, but one that connects with
    the deep tendencies and inclinations of the
    social world. For as long as we believe for good
    reasons that a self-sustaining and reasonable
    just political and social order both at home and
    abroad is possible, we can reasonably hope that
    we or others will someday, somewhere, achieve it
    and we can then do something towards this
    achievement. This alone, quite apart from our
    success or failure, suffices to banish the
    dangers of resignation and cynicism
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