Barbara H. Fried presents a powerful critique of the nonconsequentialist approaches that have been dominant in recent Anglophone moral and political thought. She argues that nonconsequentialist theories have disastrous consequences in the political domain and are inadequate at dealing with conflicts of individual interests in the moral domain.
Barbara H. Fried presents a powerful critique of the nonconsequentialist approaches that have been dominant in recent Anglophone moral and political thought. She argues that nonconsequentialist theories have disastrous consequences in the political domain and are inadequate at dealing with conflicts of individual interests in the moral domain.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Barbara Fried is the William W. and Gertrude H. Saunders Professor of Law at Stanford University. Her scholarly interests lie at the intersection of law, economics, and philosophy. She has written extensively on questions of distributive justice in the areas of tax policy, property theory, and political theory. She is also the author of a path-breaking intellectual history of the Progressive-era law and economics movement.
Inhaltsangabe
* 1: Introduction * 2: Facing Up to Risk * 3: What Does Matter? The Case for Killing the Trolley Problem (or Letting it Die) * 4: Can Scanlonian Contractualism Save Us From Aggregation? * 5: Tortious Harms * 6: Can Contractualism Be Saved? * 7: Is Nozick a Libertarian? * 8: Rawls, Risk, and the Maximin Principle * 9: The Unwritten Theory of Justice: Rawlsian Liberalism versus Libertarianism * 10: Left-Libertarianism * 11: Wilt Chamberlain Revisited: Nozick's Justice in Transfer and the Problem of Market-Based Distribution * 12: "If You Don't Like It, Leave It": The Problem of Exit in Social Contractarian Arguments * 13: The Case for a Progressive Benefits Tax
* 1: Introduction * 2: Facing Up to Risk * 3: What Does Matter? The Case for Killing the Trolley Problem (or Letting it Die) * 4: Can Scanlonian Contractualism Save Us From Aggregation? * 5: Tortious Harms * 6: Can Contractualism Be Saved? * 7: Is Nozick a Libertarian? * 8: Rawls, Risk, and the Maximin Principle * 9: The Unwritten Theory of Justice: Rawlsian Liberalism versus Libertarianism * 10: Left-Libertarianism * 11: Wilt Chamberlain Revisited: Nozick's Justice in Transfer and the Problem of Market-Based Distribution * 12: "If You Don't Like It, Leave It": The Problem of Exit in Social Contractarian Arguments * 13: The Case for a Progressive Benefits Tax
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