Economic Justice and Natural Law.
Gary Chartier elaborates a version of economic justice rooted in the natural law tradition.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leiden :
Cambridge University Press,
2009.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Half-title; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgments ; Introduction; I The plan of the book; II The core of natural law theory; III Basic aspects of well being; A Identifying basic aspects of well being; 1 Direct recognition; 2 Critical reflection on action and inclination; 3 Critical reflection on privation; 4 Undeniability and self-evidence; 5 Reflective equilibrium; B Basic aspects of well being as irreducible, incommensurable, and non-fungible; 1 Basic aspects of well being as irreducible; 2 The cognitive significance of emotional satisfaction.
- 3 Basic aspects of well being as objective4 Choices among basic aspects of welfare; IV Requirements of practical reasonableness; A The Golden Rule; 1 No discrimination except in pursuit of basic aspects of well being; 2 No treating others as one would not want to be treated; B The Pauline Principle; C The Efficiency and Integrity Principles; D The status of rights; V The shape of practical reason in the natural law view; VI Natural law and social order; A Practical reasonableness and communal and societal norms, rules, and institutions; B Mechanisms for maintaining social order.
- C Subsidiarity and social orderVII Natural law and economic life; 1 Foundations: property; I Property regimes as contingent but constrained social strategies; II Rationales for property rights; A Autonomy; B Compensation; C Generosity; D Productivity; E Reliability; F Stewardship; G Identity; 1 Property as fungible and personal; 2 Non-fungible property as identity-constitutive; 3 Grounds for the identity rationale; 4 The implications of recognizing the significance of identity-constitution; H The impact of the practical principles; III The limits of property.
- A The requirement that there be dependable property rightsB The preclusion of monopolies and workplace abuses; C Need-based claims to others' property; D Claims based on abandonment and underutilization; IV Property and justice; 2 Foundations: distribution; I Distribution and practical reasonableness; A Justice as a personal responsibility; B Criteria of justice in distribution; 1 Need; 2 Function; 3 Commitments and attachments; 4 Efficiency; 5 Capacity; 6 Reward; 7 Productivity; 8 Risk; 9 Avoidance of harm; II Commercial exchange and justice in distribution.
- A Process, outcome and market price1 Process; 2 Outcome; 3 The relevance of market price; B Contract terms as pointers to unjust background conditions; C The just price; III The public trust threshold; A Specifying the public trust threshold; B The potential relevance of personal vocation; C Targeting resources beyond the public trust threshold; 1 The diversity of ways in which one can use resources beyond the threshold; 2 Distinguishing the requirement to make reasonable use of resources beyond the threshold from the requirement of moderate beneficence.