This book is an original critique of contemporary liberal theories of
justice, focusing on the problem of how to relate the personal point
of view of the individual to the impartial perspective of justice.
Margaret Moore's examination of prominent contemporary arguments for
liberal justice reveals that individualist theories are subject to two
serious difficulties: the motivation problem and the integrity
problem. Individualists cannot explain why the individual should be
motivated to act in accordance with the dictates of liberal justice,
and–related to this–offer radically incoherent accounts of the
person. Revisionist liberal attempts to ground liberalism in
contextual and perfectionist terms offer more defensible foundations,
but Dr Moore argues that such theories do not support liberal
political principles. She concludes by sketching a historical and
concrete approach to political and ethical theorizing which
reformulates the relation between self-interest and morality, and is
not subject to the problems that beset liberal individualist theories
of justice. Her book advances the debate between communitarians and
liberals about the kind of moral foundation which a liberal society
requires.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191520822
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Clarendon Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter