Preface
1: Biography
1.1: Family and Schooling
1.2: College and War
1.3: Academic Career
1.4: The Turbulent Decade 1962-1971
1.5: After A Theory of Justice
1.6: The Meaning of Rawls's Project
2: The Focus on the Basic Structure
2.1: The Origin of the Theory
2.2: The Complexity of Modern Sciences
2.3: The Idea of an Overlapping Consensus
2.4: The Scope of the Theory
3: A Top-Tier Criterion of Justice
3.1: Purely Recipient-Oriented Criteria of Justice
3.2: The Anonymity Condition
3.3: Fundamental Interests versus Happiness
4: The Basic Idea: Justice as Fairness
4.1: The Original Position
4.2: Maximin versus Average
4.3: Primary Goods
4.4: The Lexical Priority of the Basic Liberties
5: The First Principle of Justice
5.1: The Structure of a Basic Right
5.2: Formulating the Required Scheme of Basic Rights and
Liberties
5.3: The Fair Value of the Basic Political Liberties
5.4: Permissible Reductions of Basic Liberties
5.5: Impermissible Reductions of Basic Liberties
6: The Second Principle of Justice
6.1: The Difference Principle in First Approximation
6.2: The Difference Principle in Detail
6.3: Advocating the Difference Principle in the Original
Position
6.4: The Opportunity Principle
6.5: Advocating the Opportunity Principle in the Original
Position
6.6: A Property-Owning Democracy
7: A Rawlsian Society
7.1: A Well-Ordered Society
7.2: A Political Conception of Justice
7.3: Political versus Comprehensive Liberalisms
7.4: An Egalitarian Liberal Conception of Justice
7.5: A Society Well-Ordered by Rawls's Conception
7.6: A More Realistic Vision
8: On Justification
8.1: Reflective Equilibrium
8.2: Fundamental Ideas
8.3: Truth and Reasonableness
9: The Reception of Justice as Fairness
9.1: Rawls and Libertarianism
9.2: Rawls and Communitarianism
9.3: Rawls and Kant
Conclusion
Appendix
Index
Thomas Pogge is Professor of Political Science at Columbia University and Professorial Research Fellow at the ANU Centre for Philosophy and Public Ethics. He has published widely on Rawls, Kant, political and moral philosophy, and on issues in global justice.
"There is a big need for a brief but well-informed study of Rawls
for students and other beginners, complete with a bit of
biographical information. Pogge's book is ideal. It is popular
without being inaccurate. Pogge is as knowledgeable about Rawls's
work as anyone could be, and he is a clear writer and a rigorous
thinker."--Thomas Nagel, New York University
"The book is indeed a pleasure to read; serious, clear,
substantial, and sensible: it is for me the exemplar of what a book
in philosophy ought to be today."--Rudiger Bittner, University of
Bielefeld (on the German edition)
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