more from this thinker | more from this text
Full Idea
I do not believe that anyone of [that small part of a nation that is rich and voluptuous] would submit to a lottery determining which part of the nation would be free, and which slave.
Gist of Idea
The rich would never submit to a lottery deciding which part of their society should be slaves
Source
Baron de Montesquieu (The Spirit of the Laws (rev. 1757) [1748], 15.09)
Book Ref
Montesquieu,Baron de: 'Selected Political Writings', ed/tr. Richter,Melvin [Hackett 1990], p.206
A Reaction
Wonderful! This is exactly Rawls's 'initial position' and 'veil of ignorance'. It is used here to deconstruct implausible arguments in favour of slavery.
20005 | The rich would never submit to a lottery deciding which part of their society should be slaves [Montesquieu] |
18636 | Choose justice principles in ignorance of your own social situation [Rawls] |
20595 | You can't distribute goods from behind a veil, because their social meaning is unclear [Walzer, by Tuckness/Wolf] |
23109 | The veil of ignorance is only needed because people have bad motivations [Kekes] |
20987 | The veil of ignorance encourages neutral interests, but not a wider view of values [Sen] |
20568 | The principles Rawls arrives at do not just conform to benevolence, but also result from choices [Oksala] |
20593 | The veil of ignorance ensures both fairness and unanimity [Tuckness/Wolf] |
22848 | People with strong prior beliefs would have nothing to do with a veil of ignorance [Charvet] |