Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- Introduction: Equality, Responsibility, and Justice
- PART 1 Luck Egalitarianisms
- PART 2 Luck Egalitarianism as an Account of Equality
- 3 Substantive Equality
- 4 Insult and Injury
- PART 3 Luck Egalitarianism as an Account of Justice
- Conclusion: A More Efficient Luck Egalitarianism
- Bibliography
- Index
4 - Insult and Injury
from PART 2 - Luck Egalitarianism as an Account of Equality
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- Introduction: Equality, Responsibility, and Justice
- PART 1 Luck Egalitarianisms
- PART 2 Luck Egalitarianism as an Account of Equality
- 3 Substantive Equality
- 4 Insult and Injury
- PART 3 Luck Egalitarianism as an Account of Justice
- Conclusion: A More Efficient Luck Egalitarianism
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Introductory Remarks
Despite its prominence and many internal disputes, luck egalitarianism had, until the late 1990s, failed to attract high-profile external criticism from an egalitarian perspective. This changed, however, with the publication of Elizabeth Anderson's thought-provoking article ‘What Is the Point of Equality?’. A fixed conviction of egalitarian justice is, in Ronald Dworkin's terms, that a government treats all its citizens with equal concern and respect. Anderson arrestingly claims that luck egalitarianism fails to express equal concern and respect for individuals. Contemporary egalitarian philosophy is consequently not only objectionable to conservatives but embarrassing to egalitarians.
She is not alone in making these claims. Several writers have argued that the roles of equality and responsibility in luck egalitarianism are far more problematic than its proponents suppose. According to some there is nothing particularly egalitarian about rewarding those who act responsibly and penalizing those who act less responsibly. It is claimed that luck egalitarianism's dedication to full responsibility sensitivity makes a mockery of its supposed commitment to equality. That same dedication makes it frivolously redistribute in some cases and turn its back when its assistance is most in need. As we shall see, some have gone even further than Anderson, and suggested that the conservative opponents of social equality will welcome luck egalitarianism with open arms.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Luck EgalitarianismEquality Responsibility and Justice, pp. 122 - 166Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2009