Transcript 100Rawls2

RAWLS 2
CRITIQUES OF RAWLS
John Rawls 1921-2002
One role of political
philosophy: “to calm our
frustration and rage against
our society and its history
by showing us the way in
which its institutions… are
rational, and developed
over time as they did to
attain their present, rational
form.”
Justice as Fairness p. 3
Critique from the RIGHT
“The” Right: libertarians, capitalists,
free-marketeers…
Rawls is overly egalitarian [cf.
Nietzsche]. In his own words, he
seeks “a conception of justice that
nullifies the accidents of natural
endowment and the contingencies of
social circumstance” 602
Critique from the RIGHT
Robert Nozick (libertarian):
Wilt Chamberlain example
If people were placed in state of ideal
equality, they would freely
—and justly—
return to a state of inequality.
Critique from the RIGHT
Jan Narveson (libertarian)
Concept of right as a three place
relationship:
A has the right to B
at the expense of C
Critique from the LEFT
“The” Left: Marxists, socialists, egalitarians...
Rawls merely defends the status quo of
“liberal” capitalism. In his own words, he
seeks a system which will “draw forth the
willing cooperation of everyone taking part
in it, including those less well situated”
even though the “difference principle”
protects “those better [naturally] endowed,
or more fortunate in their social position,
neither of which we can be said to
deserve.” 602
Critique from the LEFT
1. Robert Paul Wolff, “analytical
Marxist”: equality is moral imperative
2. “Jerry” Cohen: difference principle
increases rich-poor gap.
3. Value (vs. fact) of basic rights greater
for rich than for poor.
RIGHT versus LEFT
Rawls aims to balance
Liberalism  Egalitarianism
LIBERALISM
Right, freedom, master morality
EGALITARIANISM
Left, equality, slave morality
SO criticism from both sides expected?
FEMINIST critiques
Rawls ignores the special injustices,
rights and responsibilities associated
with gender. [Rawls speaks of “men”
rather than people.]
Susan Okin:
nuclear family systematically burdens
women and keeps them out of the
market.
Diversity critiques:
Rawls abstracts human beings from
their actual identities in ethnicity,
religion, language, culture, (dis)ability,
etc.
Diversity critiques: a response
Rawls begins with the fact that people
have different benefits and burdens
(both natural and social), as well as
different religions, conceptions of
good, etc.
YET he aims to find the common human
reason and values which would justify
political union.
Common Human Reason [?]
“Our exercise of political power is fully
proper only when it is exercised in
accordance with a constitution the
essentials of which all citizens as free
and equal may reasonably be
expected to endorse in the light of
principles and ideals acceptable to
their common human reason.”
Political Liberalism, p.137