Justice and Rationality: Some Objections to the Central Argument in Rawls's Theory
- 1 June 1975
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 69 (2) , 615-629
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1959092
Abstract
The argument is made that Rawls's proposed principles of justice would not rationally be chosen in his proposed version of the “original position.” First of all, Rawls's own account of the information available in the original position provides no basis for the conclusions about “primary goods” which he believes would imply his proposed principles. Second, even if those conclusions about primary goods were to be accepted, they would not imply the proposed principles (the “general” and the “special” conceptions of justice) because the claims which Rawls cites in support of “maximin” actually imply a different conception. Lastly, an alternative version of the original position is suggested which would avoid these difficulties and which would, in addition, successfully support a maximin conception of justice. This is not meant, however, as a conclusive argument for maximin, but only as an indication that the objections advanced here do not apply to “social contract theory” as such, but only to the particular version of it which Rawls has proposed.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rawls' Theory of Justice--IThe Philosophical Quarterly, 1973
- Rawls on JusticeThe Philosophical Review, 1973
- The Limits of IndividualismThe Journal of Philosophy, 1972
- Justice, Fairness and RationalityThe Yale Law Journal, 1972
- A Theory of JusticePublished by Harvard University Press ,1971
- Four Essays on LibertyThe Western Political Quarterly, 1971