Format:
xiv, 252 Seiten
,
24 cm
ISBN:
9781316613672
,
9781107158900
,
1107158907
Content:
Machine generated contents note:1.Introduction --1.1.The Distributive Ideal of Justice --1.2.The Relational Ideal of Justice --1.3.Relational Egalitarianism: A Thumbnail Sketch of Its Recent History --1.4.An Overview of the Book --1.5.Summary --pt. INATURE --2.Relational Egalitarianism --2.1.Introduction --2.2.Luck Egalitarianism versus Relational Egalitarianism --2.3.Anderson's Critique of Luck Egalitarianism --2.4.Democratic Equality --2.5.Scheffler's Critique of Luck Egalitarianism --2.6.The Egalitarian Deliberative Constraint --2.7.A Comparison --2.8.Conclusion --3.Relating to One Another As Equals --3.1.Introduction --3.2.Equals with Regard to What? --3.3.Relating, Regarding and Treating --3.4.Treating As --3.5.Equals --3.6.Regarding As Equals --3.7.The Ideal of Relational Equality and Ideal Ways of Relating As Equals --3.8.Conclusion --4.Equality and Being in a Position to Hold Others Accountable: A Case Study --4.1.Introduction --4.2.What Is Hypocritical Blame? --4.3.Wallace's Egalitarian Account of the Distinctive Wrongness of Hypocrisy --4.4.Why Not Hypocrisy? --4.5.Hypocrisy and Relational Equality --4.6.Conclusion --pt. IISITE, SCOPE AND JUSTIFICATION --5.Egalitarian Relations: Time, Site and Scope --5.1.Introduction --5.2.Intergenerational Justice --5.3.Age --5.4.Site --5.5.Scope --5.6.Conclusion --6.Justification of and by the Ideal --6.1.Introduction --6.2.Instrumentally Valuable --6.3.Non-Instrumentally Valuable for Persons --6.4.Impersonally Valuable --6.5.Not (Primarily) Valuable, but Required --6.6.Aims of Real-Life Egalitarians and the Value of Equality --6.7.Conclusion --pt. IIIRELATIONAL AND DISTRIBUTIVE EQUALITY --7.Pluralist Egalitarianism --7.1.Introduction --7.2.Consistency --7.3.An Underlying Disagreement about Justification? --7.4.Reduction --7.5.Dispositional Egalitarianism --7.6.Pluralist Egalitarianism --7.7.Conclusion --8.Often the Twain Meet --8.1.Introduction --8.2.Anderson on Equality of Opportunity and/or Capability --8.3.Offensive Tastes --8.4.Snobbery --8.5.Dworkinian Bureaucracy --8.6.Cohen on Justificatory Community --8.7.Communal Camping --8.8.Conclusion --9.Conclusion.
Content:
"Over the last twenty years, many political philosophers have rejected the idea that justice is fundamentally about distribution. Rather, justice is about social relations, and the so-called distributive paradigm should be replaced by a new relational paradigm. Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen seeks to describe, refine, and assess these thoughts and to propose a comprehensive form of egalitarianism which includes central elements from both relational and distributive paradigms. He shows why many of the challenges that luck egalitarianism faces reappear, once we try to specify relational egalitarianism more fully. His discussion advances understanding of the nature of the relational ideal, and introduces new conceptual tools for understanding it and for exploring the important question of why it is desirable in the first place to relate as equals. Even severe critics of the distributive understanding of justice will find that this book casts important new light on the ideal to which they subscribe"--
Note:
Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 239-246
,
Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke
Additional Edition:
10.1017/978-1-316-67584-7
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781108594141
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781108594141
Additional Edition:
Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe Lippert-Rasmussen, Kasper, - 1964- Relational egalitarianism Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018 ISBN 9781316675847
Language:
English
Subjects:
Philosophy
Keywords:
Soziale Schichtung
Bookmarklink