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48When Justice Demands InequalityJournal of Moral Philosophy 11 (4). 2014.In Rescuing Justice and Equality G.A. Cohen argues that justice requires an uncompromising commitment to equality. Cohen also argues, however, that justice must be sensitive to other values, including a robust commitment to individual freedom and to the welfare of the community. We ask whether a commitment to these other values means that, despite Cohen’s commitment to equality, his view requires that we make room for inequality in the name of justice? We argue that even on Cohen’s version of eg…Read more
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11Ordering AnarchyRationality, Markets and Morals 5 (1): 30-46. 2014.Ordered social life requires rules of conduct that help generate and preserve peaceful and cooperative interactions among individuals. The problem is that these social rules impose costs. They prohibit us from doing some things we might see as important and they require us to do other things that we might otherwise not do. The question for the contractarian is whether the costs of these social rules can be rationally justified. I argue that traditional contract theories have tended to underestim…Read more
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168Uniqueness and symmetry in bargaining theories of justicePhilosophical Studies 167 (3): 683-699. 2014.For contractarians, justice is the result of a rational bargain. The goal is to show that the rules of justice are consistent with rationality. The two most important bargaining theories of justice are David Gauthier’s and those that use the Nash’s bargaining solution. I argue that both of these approaches are fatally undermined by their reliance on a symmetry condition. Symmetry is a substantive constraint, not an implication of rationality. I argue that using symmetry to generate uniqueness un…Read more
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64The Virtues of Justice1In Timpe Kevin & Boyd Craig (eds.), Virtues and Their Vices, Oxford University Press. pp. 59. 2013.
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149When Justice Demands InequalityJournal of Moral Philosophy 10 (4): 172-194. 2013.In Rescuing Justice and Equality G.A. Cohen argues that justice requires an uncompromising commitment to equality. Cohen also argues, however, that justice must be sensitive to other values, including a robust commitment to individual freedom and to the welfare of the community. We ask whether a commitment to these other values means that, despite Cohen’s commitment to equality, his view requires that we make room for inequality in the name of justice? We argue that even on Cohen’s version of eg…Read more
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