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Single Idea 21040

[filed under theme 25. Social Practice / B. Equalities / 4. Economic equality ]

Full Idea

The libertarian view of distributive justice is a free market with formal equality of opportunity. The meritocratic view is a free market with fair equality of opportunity.

Gist of Idea

Libertarians just want formal equality in a free market; the meritocratic view wants fair equality

Source

Michael J. Sandel (Justice: What's the right thing to do? [2009], 06)

Book Ref

Sandel,Michael J.: 'Justice: what's the right thing to do?' [Penguin 2010], p.157


A Reaction

The obvious question is what has to be done, by intervention, to make the market fair. There are two major rival views of equality here. Is the starting point fair, and is the race itself fair?


The 19 ideas from 'Justice: What's the right thing to do?'

We can approach justice through welfare, or freedom, or virtue [Sandel]
Justice concerns how a society distributes what it prizes - wealth, rights, power and honours [Sandel]
A just constitution harmonises the different freedoms [Sandel]
Speak truth only to those who deserve the truth [Sandel]
Careful evasions of truth at least show respect for it [Sandel]
The categorical imperative is not the Golden Rule, which concerns contingent desires [Sandel]
Man cannot dispose of himself, because he is not a thing to be owned [Sandel]
Just visiting (and using roads) is hardly ratifying the Constitution [Sandel]
A ratified constitution may not be a just constitution [Sandel]
Not all deals are fair deals [Sandel]
Does consent create the obligation, or must there be some benefit? [Sandel]
Moral contracts involve both consent and reciprocity; making the deal, and keeping it [Sandel]
Libertarians just want formal equality in a free market; the meritocratic view wants fair equality [Sandel]
Distributive justice concern deserts, as well as who gets what [Sandel]
Should we redress wrongs done by a previous generation? [Sandel]
Work is not fair if it is negotiated, even in a fair situation, but if it suits the nature of the worker [Sandel]
Teleological thinking is essential for social and political issues [Sandel]
Liberal freedom was a response to assigned destinies like caste and class [Sandel]
Justice is about how we value things, and not just about distributions [Sandel]