Luck and democracy : the role of the luck-choice principle in democratic egalitarianism

Egalitarianism is the view that inequalities in society should be minimised. The motivation for pursuing an equal distribution is captured by a grounding principle, while the terms and conditions of such a distribution are captured by a substantive principle. According to Democratic Egalitarianism (...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chalson, Shalom Shaleni
Other Authors: Andrew T. Forcehimes
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72754
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-72754
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-727542019-12-10T11:09:19Z Luck and democracy : the role of the luck-choice principle in democratic egalitarianism Chalson, Shalom Shaleni Andrew T. Forcehimes School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities Egalitarianism is the view that inequalities in society should be minimised. The motivation for pursuing an equal distribution is captured by a grounding principle, while the terms and conditions of such a distribution are captured by a substantive principle. According to Democratic Egalitarianism (DE), persons in society should have effective access to necessary functionings, or beings and doings, required over the course of a life. The grounding principle of this view is Democratic Reciprocity (DR), the notion that persons must raise one another to positions of equality, because each is deserving of equal concern. What this view lacks is a substantive principle which adequately specifies which inequalities fall under the purview of justice. DE’s substantive requirement is that persons be politically responsible, or contributions to the joint division of labour that is society. The view, as it stands, does not conceive of that responsibility as inclusive of a cut between luck and choice. I argue that failing to consider how the unchosen circumstances of one’s life may impact one’s capacity for contribution would generate, rather than minimise, inequalities. Accordingly, I attempt to make the case for an inclusion of the luck-choice principle in DE’s conception of political responsibility. Bachelor of Arts 2017-11-07T01:07:56Z 2017-11-07T01:07:56Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72754 en Nanyang Technological University 38 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities
Chalson, Shalom Shaleni
Luck and democracy : the role of the luck-choice principle in democratic egalitarianism
description Egalitarianism is the view that inequalities in society should be minimised. The motivation for pursuing an equal distribution is captured by a grounding principle, while the terms and conditions of such a distribution are captured by a substantive principle. According to Democratic Egalitarianism (DE), persons in society should have effective access to necessary functionings, or beings and doings, required over the course of a life. The grounding principle of this view is Democratic Reciprocity (DR), the notion that persons must raise one another to positions of equality, because each is deserving of equal concern. What this view lacks is a substantive principle which adequately specifies which inequalities fall under the purview of justice. DE’s substantive requirement is that persons be politically responsible, or contributions to the joint division of labour that is society. The view, as it stands, does not conceive of that responsibility as inclusive of a cut between luck and choice. I argue that failing to consider how the unchosen circumstances of one’s life may impact one’s capacity for contribution would generate, rather than minimise, inequalities. Accordingly, I attempt to make the case for an inclusion of the luck-choice principle in DE’s conception of political responsibility.
author2 Andrew T. Forcehimes
author_facet Andrew T. Forcehimes
Chalson, Shalom Shaleni
format Final Year Project
author Chalson, Shalom Shaleni
author_sort Chalson, Shalom Shaleni
title Luck and democracy : the role of the luck-choice principle in democratic egalitarianism
title_short Luck and democracy : the role of the luck-choice principle in democratic egalitarianism
title_full Luck and democracy : the role of the luck-choice principle in democratic egalitarianism
title_fullStr Luck and democracy : the role of the luck-choice principle in democratic egalitarianism
title_full_unstemmed Luck and democracy : the role of the luck-choice principle in democratic egalitarianism
title_sort luck and democracy : the role of the luck-choice principle in democratic egalitarianism
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72754
_version_ 1681046729267347456