Authors: John Rawls
ISBN-13: 9780674000780, ISBN-10: 0674000781
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Date Published: September 1999
Edition: Revised Edition
John Rawls was James Bryant Conant University Professor at Harvard University. He was recipient of the 1999 National Humanities Medal.
Since it appeared in 1971, John Rawls's A Theory of Justice has become a classic. The author has now revised the original edition to clear up a number of difficulties he and others have found in the original book.
Rawls aims to express an essential part of the common core of the democratic traditionjustice as fairnessand to provide an alternative to utilitarianism, which had dominated the Anglo-Saxon tradition of political thought since the nineteenth century. Rawls substitutes the ideal of the social contract as a more satisfactory account of the basic rights and liberties of citizens as free and equal persons. "Each person," writes Rawls, "possesses an inviolability founded on justice that even the welfare of society as a whole cannot override." Advancing the ideas of Rousseau, Kant, Emerson, and Lincoln, Rawls's theory is as powerful today as it was when first published.
In his magisterial new work...John Rawls draws on the most subtle techniques of contemporary analytic philosophy to provide the social contract tradition with what is, from a philosophical point of view at least, the most formidable defense it has yet received...[and] makes available the powerful intellectual resources and the comprehensive approach that have so far eluded antiutilitarians. He also makes clear how wrong it was to claim, as so many were claiming only a few years back, that systematic moral and political philosophy are dead...Whatever else may be true it is surely true that we must develop a sterner and more fastidious sense of justice. In making his peerless contribution to political theory, John Rawls has made a unique contribution to this urgent task. No higher achievement is open to a scholar.
Marshall Cohen
Ch. I | Justice as fairness | 3 |
Ch. II | The principles of justice | 54 |
Ch. III | The original position | 118 |
Ch. IV | Equal liberty | 195 |
Ch. V | Distributive shares | 258 |
Ch. VI | Duty and obligation | 333 |
Ch. VII | Goodness as rationality | 395 |
Ch. VIII | The sense of justice | 453 |
Ch. IX | The good of justice | 513 |