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John Rawls

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John Rawls 1921 2002 Professor of Philosophy at Harvard 1964-2002 (emeritus 1996) Spent a few years at Oxford, where he studied under Isiah Berlin (who we ll ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: John Rawls


1
John Rawls
  • 1921 2002
  • Professor of Philosophy at Harvard 1964-2002
    (emeritus 1996)
  • Spent a few years at Oxford, where he studied
    under Isiah Berlin (who well read later
    regarding liberty).

2
Rawls
  • Justice is defined as fairness. Fairness is
    determined by individuals in an original
    position behind a veil of ignorance The
    principles endorsed by the people in the
    original position are tested using the process of
    reflective equilibrium,
  • Which really simply means that we adjust our
    beliefs until they are consistent with eachother.
  • This process leads to two principles of justice
  • Liberty principle society must provide each
    individual with the basic rights or
    liberties.
  • Difference principle inequalities in wealth and
    power should be distributed so as to benefit the
    worst off.

3
Rawls contribution
  • To Rawls or not to Rawls?
  • His contribution to social / political philosophy
    cannot be underestimated.
  • Prior to the publication of the paper form of
    Justice as Fairness in 1958, social / political
    philosophy in the Analytic tradition was, well,
    dead.

4
Conceptual Analysis
  • Justice is X
  • Fairness is Y
  • If X Y, Justice Fairness.
  • But that is not Rawls claim, his theory is for
    justice as fairness.

5
The project
  • Rawls is putatively not offering a defense of a
    particular type of state or system of Government.
  • Like, say Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau Goldman.
  • He is offering an account of justice, by which
    various political systems can be judged.

6
Therefore,
  • Fairness is X.
  • The principles by which we judge states, laws,
    etc as just or unjust are those that would be
    agreed upon by people in a totally fair society.
  • Therefore, the principles by which are those
    that would be agreed upon by people in a society
    that embodies X.
  • The fair society the original condition, where
    we operate behind a veil of ignorance.

7
Reflective Equilibrium
  • The principles endorsed by the people in the
    original position are tested using the process of
    reflective equilibrium,
  • Which really simply means that we adjust our
    beliefs until they are consistent with eachother.
  • Note there is some conflict on the
    interpretation of Rawls use of the notion. It
    might just be a adaptation of the coherence
    theory of truth, which dominated philosophy in
    the middle of this century. It is, however,
    currently in disrepute.

8
Ultimate conclusion
  • There are two principles of justice
  • Liberty principle society must provide each
    individual with the basic rights or
    liberties.
  • Difference principle inequalities in wealth and
    power should be distributed so as to benefit the
    worst off.

9
OK, the details
  • What is justice?
  • The first virtue of social institutions.
  • What is a first virtue?
  • It is as truth is to a system thought
  • What is a social institution?
  • A society is a more or less self-sufficient
    association who in their relations to one another
    recognize certain rules of conduct as binding and
    who for the most part act in accordance with
    them (4)

10
The Rules?
  • Social institutions the rules by which people
    in a society abide.
  • ASSUMPTION that these rules are designed for
    mutual advantage.
  • Society is typically marked by conflict as well
    as identity of interests
  • Identity of interests because cooperation make
    life better for all (as opposed to living alone)
  • Conflict because the benefits of cooperation need
    to be distributed.

11
The problem?
  • Need to create a system for judging which method
    of distribution is the best the principles of
    justice. (4)
  • In a well-ordered society
  • Everyone knows accepts that everyone knows
    accepts the same principles of justice.
  • The basic social institutions generally satisfy
    are known to satisfy these principles.

12
Hold on right there
  1. OK, so what are we to do with sociopaths?
  2. Autistics?
  3. Idiots?
  4. Children?
  5. The Senile?
  6. Insane?
  7. Etc.

13
Cont
  • OK, so what do we do when the basic social
    institutions are either
  • Untrustworthy
  • Untrusted
  • Eg The Tuskegee experiment
  • Smallpox blankets
  • Eugenics Involuntary sterilization

14
Remember
  • Rawls not at all concerned with reality in
    fact, he is so far from the reality of real,
    existing human society that four pages into the
    text, realists (those concerned with the
    practical) are incapable of following along!
  • Rawls is concerned with a conceptual analysis of
    justice.

15
Competing views
  • Plato Justice is a each part of society (the
    person) existing in balance
  • Thrasymachus Justice is whatever those in power
    say it is.
  • Mill justice is what ever produces the greatest
    good for the greatest number.
  • Democracy justice is whatever the majority
    says it is.

16
So the question is
  • When we say that was a just ruling, what do we
    mean?
  • When we demand justice for, say, the victims of
    August Pinochet, what do we mean?
  • When we say taxes are unjust, what do we mean?
  • How do we settle questions like Is it just for ½
    the states to pay 1.4 trillion more in taxes then
    the receive, and the other ½ to receive 800
    billion more than they pay?

17
And the answer is
  • the principles o justice for the basic structure
    of society are the object of the original
    agreement. They are principles that free and
    rational persons concerned to further their own
    interests would accept in an initial position of
    equality as defining the fundamental terms of
    their association. These principles are to
    regulate all further agreements they specify the
    kinds of social cooperation that can be entered
    into and the forms of government that can be
    established. (10)

18
Justice as fairness
  • the original position is the appropriate initial
    status quo which insures that the fundamental
    agreements reached in it are fair. (15)
  • Thus, a principle X is more just than another
    principle Y iff the people in the original
    condition would prefer X to Y. (I.e. in a fair
    society, X is preferable to Y) (15-16)

19
Two Principles
  • No one should be advantaged or disadvantaged by
    natural fortune of social circumstances in the
    choice of principles (17)
  • Thus, the veil of ignorance
  • It seems reasonable to suppose that the parties
    in the original condition are equal (17)
  • Together with the veil of ignorance, these to
    principles define the principles of justice

20
Two conflicting principles
  • Each person is to have an equal right to the most
    extensive scheme of equal basic liberties
    compatible with a similar scheme of liberties for
    others. (liberty)
  • Social and economic inequalities are to be
    arranged so that they are both (a) reasonably
    expected to be to everyones advantage, and (b)
    attached to positions and offices open to all.
    (equality)
  • How do we test the theory compare it to our
    intuitive notion
  • Is that what we mean when we demand justice for,
    say, the victims of August Pinochet?(e.g.)

21
With a twist
  • in the case of discrepancies between our
    commonsense notion of justice and the principles
    of justice agreed upon by the fair society We
    can either modify the account of the initial
    situation or we can revise our existing
    judgments, for even the judgments we take
    provisionally as fixed points are liable to
    revision. By going back and forth, sometimes
    altering the conditions of the contractual
    circumstances, at others withdrawing our
    judgments and conforming them to principle, I
    assume that eventually we shall find a
    description of the initial situation that both
    expresses reasonable conditions and yields
    principles which match our considered judgments
    duly pruned and adjusted. This state of affairs
    I refer to as reflective equilibrium. (18)

22
The two principles will be in conflict
  • Solutions
  • Utilitarianism Principle of Utility is to
    arrange social institutions in such a ways that
    it maximizes the net balance of satisfaction.
  • If one has to suffer for the greater good, so be
    it (anti-equality)
  • Unacceptable violation of fairness!

23
Intuitionists
  • No higher-order principles by which we can judge
    something as fair, just, etc.
  • That is right That Yeah!
  • That is wrong That Yuk!
  • Consider consensual, protected incest. Whats
    wrong with it? Its yucky.

24
Rawls
  • Two points
  • Intuitions often based on culture
  • When these intuitions are in conflict, how do we
    resolve?
  • To reach some measure of understanding an
    agreement which goes beyond a mere de facto
    resolution of competing interests and a reliance
    on existing conventions and established
    expectations, it is necessary to move to a more
    general scheme for determining the balance of
    precepts, or at least for confining it within
    narrower limits. (31)
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