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1. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 13
Simon Cushing Agreement in Social Contract Theories: Locke vs. Rawls
... Rawls's theory and that of the traditional social contract theorists: free, equal ... "Contracts and Choices: Does Rawls have a Social Contract Theory?" Journal 0/ Philosophy ... CHAPTER 17 Agreement in Social Contract Theories: Locke vs. Rawls Simon ...
2. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 15
Andreas Follesdal Global Ethics and Respect for Culture
... they can be justified by arguments in the form of a social contract of a particular ... Rawls, A Theory of Justice (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1971) and ... considering several norms endorsed in the document: domestic democracy and fight for equal ...
3. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 27
Deen Chatterjee Reciprocity, Closed-Impartiality, and National Borders: Framing (and Extending) the Debate on Global Justice
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Liberal nationalists have been hard pressed to respond to the normative demands of human rights and global impartiality in justifying special redistributive requirements for fellow citizens in a democratic polity. In general, they tend to support disparate standards of distributive justice for insiders and outsiders by favoring a relational approach to justice that affirms co-national preferences while not denying the importance of global impartiality. Following Sen and critiquing Rawls, I re-frame the debate by re-configuring the notion of relationality with a globalist tilt, with the hope of rescuing the discourse on global justice from its current stalemate.
... himself, is about an ideal theory. In contrast, Sen proposes a comparative and ... (Sen 1997 and 2004). The social choice mechanism in Sen ... ’s functioning and capabilities in their social interactions. His carefully ...
4. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 2
Joseph P. DeMarco Justice and the Critique of Basic Social Structures
... and Rousseau is their willingness, at least in theory, to critique all social ... Rawls is making the attempt and is more successful than traditional social contract ... social institutions. Rawls adopted the point of view of the social contract ...
5. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 14
Cheryl Hughes Human Rights, State Sovereignty, and Worid Community
... Kantian social contract theory to produce principles of international political ... and protect human rights. In my evaluation of RawlsJ I argue that he needlessly ... 107 RAWLS: UNIVERSAL HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE LIMITS TO SOVEREIGNTY It is in the ...
6. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 9
Dena S. Davis Equal Treatment or Treatment as an Equal?
... tradition of social contract theory. The original position is Rawls's description of ... imperative might look like, is John Rawls. In A Theory of Justice, Rawls states that ... persons bring to the social contract in Locke, for example, we realize how crucial is ...
7. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 33
Gerald Gaus Is Public Reason a Normalization Project? Deep Diversity and the Open Society
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At one point Rawls thought that “a normalization of interests attributed to the parties” is “common to social contract doctrines.” Normalization has a great appeal: once we specify the normalized perspective, we can generate strong and definite principles of justice. Public reasoning is restricted to those who reason from the eligible, normalized, perspective; those who fall outside the “normal” are to be dismissed as unreasonable, unjust, or illiberal. As Rawls’s political liberalism project developed he increasingly relaxed his normalization assumptions, allowing room for not only different conceptions of the good, but of justice. This paper explores the post-Rawlsian movement in public reason to maximally relax, or even abandon, normalizing assumptions, drawing on a maximal diversity of normative perspectives in public justification. The public reason project is at a critical juncture. Are we to look back, defending Rawls’s substantive conclusions by devising new defenses of normalization, circling the wagons around the cherished two principles? Or are we to seek to fulfill the promise of public reason as providing a common public and moral world in the midst of diversity?
....1. Normalization and the Definite Social Contract In his Lectures on the ... ) was justified, and Rawls saw this as a core weakness in a theory ... common public and moral world in the midst of diversity? 1. Rawls ...
8. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 23
Jordy Rocheleau State Consent vs. Human Rights as Foundations for International Law: A Critique of Allen Buchanan’s Cosmopolitanism
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The traditional view that legitimate international law is founded on the consent of the states subject to it has come under increasing attack by liberals, such as Allen Buchanan, who argue for a cosmopolitan order in which the protection of human rights norms is legally foundational. The cosmopolitan argument presupposes that human rights would be better preserved by doing away with the requirement of state consent. However, state consent is seen to be necessary for protecting the rights of individuals in weaker states and preserving global stability. The requirement of state consent preserves individual rights better than attempts to assert non-consensual liberal norms as international law, such that the internationalist system is more legitimate than the cosmopolitan on the latter’s own terms.
... rights of individuals in weaker states and preserving global stability. The ... sovereign equality of states seems to foster autonomy and democracy. In a sense ... , international law, in which parties explicitly sign on to the system and its rules ...
9. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 25
Lynda Lange Globalization and the Conceptual Effects of Boundaries Between Western Political Philosophy and Economic Theory: The Case of Publicly Supported Child Care for Working Mothers
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This paper analyzes the historical and cultural genealogy of the presumed separation between ethics and economic theory, taking publicly supported care for children of working mothers (or parents) as a case that illuminates problems for thinking about gender justice that arise because of these disciplinary boundaries and the particular concept of “the human individual” that is implicit in them. Care for children of working mothers is an issue that has been important in the West since the inception of “second wave” feminism. However, I argue that the global expectation that women are responsible for care of small children, coupled with the reality that small children really must have caregivers, makes this issue pertinent to women everywhere, and it has lately been recognized as an issue for development and global justice. Predominant political philosophies and neoclassical economics have a common philosophical root in abstract individualist method. I argue that this has made possible a claim of intellectual respectability for neo-liberal politics that resists feminist and postcolonial critique, even though these critiques show its inability to deal with matters, such as the need for child care, that have moral issues inextricably involved in them. The economy of rationalindividual self-interest has so far only generated child care with a very large component of exploitation of caregivers.
... Philosophy and Economic Theory in the context of developing liberal ... ethics and social justice. In brief, there is fantastic variation ... capacities—in abstraction from any and all social order. This undifferentiated ...
10. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 9
Patricia H. Werhane Individualism, Obligations, and Rights: A Community-Based Notion of Rights
...'s description of Hobbes' radieal individualism in Hobbes and the Social Contract Tradition ... nature so that the notions of covenant and obligation, while realizable only in ... arrangements in which we develop. We are naturally and inherently social, we look to ...
11. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 13
Ronald J. Broach Contractarianism in Ethics: Actual Contracts vs. Hypothetical Contracts
... Machiavelli and on Contract Theory contracts is fairly simple and straightforward, but ... , David Gauthier and John Rawls. However all those writing in defense of a ... hypothetical Contractarianism. 334 Perspectives on Machiavelli and on Contract Theory To ...
12. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 7
Thomas Platt West Ontology, Obligations and Contracts
... perspective of such seemingly disparate social philosophers as John Rawls and Robert ... responsibilities and rights had been tied to social roles they were now to be vested equally in ... the problems associated with the social contract theory, it too suffers from ...
13. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 18
John R. Wright Conflicts of Value and the Political Ideal of Citizenship: A Defense of Political Constructivism
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In this paper, I take up Habermas’s recent writing on Rawls in Inclusion of the Other and focus on an example that Habermas discusses there, the Catholic stance on abortion. He brings in this example to question how such views could be rationally negotiated, under Rawls’s views of political liberalism, prior to arriving at an overlapping consensus. Habermas argues that Rawls must affirm the truth of moral constructivism in order to resolve the question of which conceptions of the good make a valid claim on us. Though I have criticisms of how both Rawls and Habermas cast the issue of abortion, I argue that through properly understanding the role of the political ideal of citizenship in Rawls’s conception of political liberalism, we can find resources to contend with the problem Habermas finds here. I defend the capacity of political constructivism to resolve this issue without affirming the truth of moral constructivism.
..., and the equality of women as equal citizens. Rawls wants to look at the issue in ... Thomas McCarthy in “Kantian Contructivism and Reconstructivism: Rawls and Habermas in ... Reconstructivism: Rawls and Habermas in Dialogue” criticizes public reason as overly ...
14. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 3
Randall R. Curren The Idea of Popular Sovereignty Two Hundred Years After Bastille
... view rather easily generated from social contract theory and the Will Theory of ... disputes and imposing sanctions. Rawls has defended political obligation in much the ... , for, so long as one holds to a Will Theory of obligation, social eontract theory ...
15. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 6
Sheldon Wein A Hobbesian Foundation for Welfare Rights
... in Rawls's theory, see Ronald Dworkin, "Justice and Rights", in Taking Rights ... own utility and who, in so doing, recognizes no social roles which might ... : Oxford University Press, 1969); Jean Hampton, Hobbes and the Social Contract ...
16. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 33
Youjin Kong “Non-Idealizing Abstraction” as Ideology: Non-Ideal Theory, Intersectionality, and the Power Dynamics of Oppression
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Recently, social and political philosophers have shown increased interest in the ideological nature of ideal theory and the importance of non-ideal theory. Charles Mills, who sparked recent critiques of ideal theory, invokes the notion of “non-idealizing abstractions” and argues that these are helpful when applying non-ideal theory. In contrast, I argue that the notion of non-idealizing abstractions is not a helpful tool for non-ideal theory. I suspect that it pays insufficient attention to the actual power dynamics of oppression, which significantly influence judgments about whose experiences and interests are worth being reflected by an abstraction. Failing to take account of the power differences among the oppressed, what Mills considers non-idealizing abstractions falls into ideology, which cannot reflect the experiences or interests of less-privileged minorities, and only concerns those of more-privileged minorities. I examine cases in which the concept of “patriarchy,” which Mills alleges to be a non-idealizing abstraction, functions as what I refer to as the “Colonialist Concept of Patriarchy” that marginalizes Third World women’s experiences of intersectional oppression. I suggest that a more suitable and less ideological way to apply non-ideal theory should avoid asserting that an abstraction is “non-idealizing” and should, instead, protect “resignifiability” of the abstraction.
...–17). Rawls’s work is one of the most influential texts in contemporary social and ... their contract theories from Rawls’s contract theory and ... Recently, social and political philosophers have shown increased interest in ...
17. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 1
Anthony A. Smith John Rawls’ Theory of State
...-interest and .provides little concept of social obligation. Moreover, in a sys tem of ... of Philosophy at lowa State University In A Theory of Justice John Rawls argues ... John Rawls' Theory ofthe State 21 structural tendency in the logic of capitalism ...
18. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 27
Helga Varden Amartya Sen’s The Idea of Justice—Some Kantian Rejoinders
... in his new book—The Idea of Justice. Moral, political, and social evolution is a ... ’ despite the hypothetical social contract, and this could affect the appropriateness of ... ” theory. In the Western tradition, social choice theory is taken to ...
19. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 27
Amartya Sen The Idea of Justice: A Reply
... theory and an ideal set of institutional arrangements, he in no way ... , however, I do resist is the tendency in the social contract tradition ... to talking about “ideal situations,” or—as is more common in the social contract ...
20. Social Philosophy Today: Volume > 9
Peter P. Kirschenmann Our Obligations to Nature and the Future: A Question of Justice and Rights
... strength and this number are in their turn said to depend on it. Wenz' theory of ... incorporated in the theory through the idea that negative human rights (to life and ... social groups be as weIl off as, or better off than, themselves and in their efforts ...