Ebook: Strokes of Luck: A Study in Moral and Political Philosophy
Author: Gerald Lang
- Tags: resultant luck circumstantial luck situational luck agent-regret distributive justice luck egalitarianism moral arbitrariness
- Year: 2021
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Language: English
- pdf
Strokes of Luck offers a large-scale treatment of the role of luck in our judgements about blameworthiness and responsibility, in moral philosophy, and in principles of distributive justice, in political philosophy. It takes an ‘anti-anti-luckist’ stance on these matters, and is opposed to the influential ‘anti-luckist’ views which hold that judgements of blameworthiness, or distributive relations, should be adjusted to annul or neutralize differential luck. It provides a new reading of Bernard Williams’s famous essay ‘Moral Luck’ which emphasizes the dissimilarity of Williams’s aims from the aims of Thomas Nagel and his intellectual descendants. It contends that luck egalitarianism is a structurally flawed programme, and it argues for a revised understanding of John Rawls’s justice as fairness that interprets Rawls’s hostility to factors that are ‘arbitrary from a moral point of view’ in a novel way stationed more closely to his contractarian apparatus, and less closely to luck egalitarian concerns.
Download the book Strokes of Luck: A Study in Moral and Political Philosophy for free or read online
Continue reading on any device:
Last viewed books
Related books
{related-news}
Comments (0)