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  1. Mar 25, 2008 · John Rawls (b. 1921, d. 2002) was an American political philosopher in the liberal tradition. His theory of justice as fairness describes a society of free citizens holding equal basic rights and cooperating within an egalitarian economic system. His theory of political liberalism explores the legitimate use of political power in a democracy ...

  2. The principles of justice. Rawls modifies and develops the principles of justice throughout his book. In chapter forty-six, Rawls makes his final clarification on the two principles of justice: 1. Each person is to have an equal right to the most extensive total system of equal basic liberties compatible with a similar system of liberty for all.

    • John Rawls
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    • 1971
    • 1971
  3. Oct 7, 2022 · The two principles of justice apply to a society’s basic social structure. The basic social structure is the total set of key institutions (government offices, the legal system, markets, civil society, the family, and so on), taken as a dynamic and integrated whole and constitutive of the polity as a more or less self-contained and self-sufficient system within which persons may live out ...

    • dreidy@utk.edu
  4. Feb 5, 2015 · Rawls’s substantive conception of social justice, justice as fairness, includes two principles. They are an answer to this question: “viewing society as a fair system of cooperation between citizens regarded as free and equal, what principles of justice are most appropriate to specify basic rights and liberties, and to regulate social and economic inequalities in citizens’ prospects over ...

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  6. Dec 20, 2008 · Original Position. First published Sat Dec 20, 2008; substantive revision Tue Oct 24, 2023. The original position is a central feature of John Rawls’s social contract account of justice, “justice as fairness,” set forth in A Theory of Justice (TJ). The original position is designed to be a fair and impartial point of view that is to be ...

  7. 2. Present and explain the two principles of justice. 3. Identify Rawls’s view of the relationship between individual and society, and his objections to rights-based, utilitarian, and communitarian views. 4. Address Rawls’s omission of some of the most important issues of justice in contemporary

  8. John Rawls (1921—2002) John Rawls was arguably the most important political philosopher of the twentieth century. He wrote a series of highly influential articles in the 1950s and ’60s that helped refocus Anglo-American moral and political philosophy on substantive problems about what we ought to do. His first book, A Theory of Justice [ TJ ...

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