We have seen that Rawls' theory of justice requires for its coherence a conception of community in the constitutive sense, which requires in turn a notion of agency in the cognitive sense, and we have hound that Rawls' theory of the good can allow for neither. This calls into question the theory of justice, or the thoery of the good, or both.


Ch 4. Justice and the Good - Liberalism and the Limits of Justice, 1998


We have seen that Rawls' theory of justice requires for its coherence a conception of community in the constitutive sense, which requires in turn a...

We have seen that Rawls' theory of justice requires for its coherence a conception of community in the constitutive sense, which requires in turn a...

We have seen that Rawls' theory of justice requires for its coherence a conception of community in the constitutive sense, which requires in turn a...

We have seen that Rawls' theory of justice requires for its coherence a conception of community in the constitutive sense, which requires in turn a...