Justice, Luck, and Knowledge

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Harvard University Press, 2003 - Law - 341 pages

The recent past has seen striking advances in our understanding of both moral responsibility and distributive justice. S. L. Hurley's ambitious work brings these two areas of lively debate into overdue contact with each other.

Key contemporary discussions of distributive justice have formulated egalitarian approaches in terms of responsibility; in this view, the aim of egalitarianism is to respect differences between positions for which people are responsible while neutralizing differences that are a matter of luck. But this approach, Hurley contends, has ignored the way our understanding of responsibility constrains the roles it can actually play within distributive justice. Her book brings the new articulation of responsibility to bear in explaining these constraints. While responsibility might help specify what to distribute, it cannot tell us how to distribute; thus, Hurley argues, responsibility cannot tell us to distribute in an egalitarian pattern in particular. It can, however, play other important roles in a theory of justice, in relation to incentive-seeking behavior and well-being. Hurley's book proposes a new, bias-neutralizing approach to distributive justice that places responsibility in these less problematic roles.

 

Contents

Responsibility and Justice
1
Why Alternate Sequences Are Irrelevant
54
The LuckNeutralizing
133
Why the Aim to Neutralize Luck Cannot Provide
146
Roemer on Responsibility and Equality
181
The Currency of Distributive Justice
206
The Real Roles of Responsibility in Justice
232
Outline of the Arguments
283
Bibliography
321
Index
331
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

Susan L. Hurley (1954-2007) was Professor of Philosophy at the University of Bristol.

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