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What Do We Deserve?: A Reader on Justice and Desert
 
 
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What Do We Deserve?: A Reader on Justice and Desert [Paperback]

Louis P. Pojman (Editor), Owen McLeod (Editor)

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Book Description

0195122186 978-0195122183 September 24, 1998
The concept of desert, which once enjoyed a central place in political and ethical theory, has been relegated to the margins of much of contemporary theory, if not excluded altogether. Recently a renewed interest in the topic has emerged, and several philosophers have argued that the notion merits a more central place in political and ethical theory. Some of these philosophers contend that justice exists to the extent that people receive exactly what they deserve, while others argue that desert should replace such considerations as rights, need, and equality as the basis for distributions. Still others argue that morality involves a fitting match between one's moral character and a degree of happiness. All of these positions have encountered opposition from egalitarians, libertarians, and those who are skeptical about the coherence of the concept of desert.
The first anthology of its kind, What Do We Deserve? is a balanced collection of readings that brings sharply opposing positions and arguments together and stimulates debate over the meaning and significance of desert in current thought. The book begins with eight classical readings on desert (by Plato, Aristotle, Hobbes, Smith, Kant, Mill, Sidgwick, and Ross), and later turns to contemporary interpretations of the issue. The selections examine the concept itself, analyze its relationship to the ideas of freedom and responsibility, engage in the debate between John Rawls and his critics on the merits of desert, and, finally, study the wider role and significance of desert in political and ethical theory.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"An excellent anthology. Its selections will serve, I hope, to introduce students to the Rawlsian controversy once they have read Rawls, and to appreciate the role of desert more broadly. The readings seem nicely blended in degree of difficulty for students of varying backgrounds."--Louis Guenin, Harvard Medical School

"Extremely well balanced and judicious choices. All major positions are well represented."--Allen Howard Podet, Buffalo State College

"Very interesting approach to moral philosophy--almost a looking-glass approach to virtue ethics."--Manuel Davenport, Texas AandM University

About the Author

Louis P. Pojman is at United States Military Academy, West Point. Owen McLeod is at Yale University.

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More About the Author

Lewis Vaughn is the former editor of Free Inquiry magazine and the former executive editor of the philosophy journal Philo. The late Louis P. Pojman was Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the United States Military Academy at West Point.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In these three quotations we see three different attitudes toward desert and merit, representing three different periods of social and political philosophy. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
preinstitutional conception, curved desert, weighted beneficence, equality boost, facie desert, preinstitutional desert, positive desert claims, preinstitutional notion, compensatory desert, specifically deserving, true moral responsibility, comparative desert, most meritocrats, untoward interventions, desert judgements, appraising attitudes, socialist motto, restricted equality, undeserved discriminations, desert statements, contemporary philosophical liberalism, market value theory, purely institutional conception, moral chance, trumps equality
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Basic Argument, Public Affairs, New York, John Rawls, David Miller, Oxford University Press, George Sher, Joel Feinberg, Twin Peaks, Fred Feldman, Henry Sidgwick, Brian Barry, Cambridge University Press, Princeton University Press, Adam Smith, Journal of Philosophy, Kegan Paul, United States, American Philosophical Quarterly, John Kleinig, Robert Goodin, Harvard University Press, Reconsideration of Some Received Wisdom, Robert Young, Samuel Scheffler
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