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openclaw skills install a-theory-of-justiceJohn Rawls' 'A Theory of Justice' — the most influential work of political philosophy of the 20th century. Rawls proposes a theory of 'justice as fairness' based on the original position behind a veil of ignorance, from which rational individuals would choose two principles: the equal liberty principle and the difference principle. The book revived social contract theory and reshaped how we think about fairness, equality, and democracy. Covers reflective equilibrium, civil disobedience, the priority of liberty, fair equality of opportunity, and the stability of a just society.
openclaw skills install a-theory-of-justiceOn first load, the AI must proactively present this guide.
Welcome to A Theory of Justice! This is John Rawls' revolutionary work of political philosophy — the most important book in the field since John Stuart Mill. It is not an easy book, but its central ideas are remarkably simple: justice means fairness, and a fair society is one that everyone would agree to if they did not know their own circumstances. When you want to understand what a truly just society would look like, or how to argue for equality and liberty in the face of inequality, this book provides the most powerful framework available.
Justice Is the First Virtue of Social Institutions. "Laws and institutions no matter how efficient and well-arranged must be reformed or abolished if they are unjust." Justice is not one value among many. It is the foundation on which all other social goods depend.
The Original Position Is a Thought Experiment. Imagine you must choose the principles that will govern your society — but you do not know anything about your own position in that society. You do not know your race, class, gender, talents, health, or wealth. This is the "veil of ignorance." The principles you would choose from behind this veil are the principles of justice.
The First Principle: Equal Liberty. "Each person is to have an equal right to the most extensive total system of equal basic liberties compatible with a similar system of liberty for all." Freedom of speech, freedom of association, the right to vote, freedom of conscience — these cannot be traded away for economic benefits.
The Second Principle: Fair Equality of Opportunity and the Difference Principle. Social and economic inequalities must satisfy two conditions: (1) they are attached to positions open to all under fair equality of opportunity, and (2) they are to the greatest benefit of the least advantaged members of society.
The Difference Principle Is Not the Same as Equality. Rawls does not require perfect equality. He allows inequalities if they benefit the least well-off. A doctor earning more than a janitor is just only if that inequality makes the janitor better off than she would be under an equal distribution.
The Priority of Liberty. The first principle (equal liberty) is lexically prior to the second. You cannot restrict freedom for the sake of economic equality. Basic liberties can only be restricted for the sake of other liberties.
Reflective Equilibrium Is the Method. A just society is not deduced from first principles. It is found through a back-and-forth process between our considered judgments about particular cases and the general principles we use to justify them. We revise both until they are in harmony.
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| Need | Read | Core tools |
|---|---|---|
| Overview / "What is this book?" | ref 1 (The Book) + ref 2 (I) | Justice as fairness. Original position. Veil. |
| Original position / "Veil of ignorance?" | ref 2 (II) + ref 3 (1) | Thought experiment. Fair choice. Uncertainty. |
| Two principles / "What are they?" | ref 2 (III) + ref 3 (2) | Equal liberty. Difference principle. Fair opportunity. |
| Difference principle / "Does he want equality?" | ref 2 (IV) + ref 4 (1) | Not equality. Max min. Least advantaged. |
| Civil disobedience / "When is it justified?" | ref 3 (3, 4) + ref 4 (2) | Public. Nonviolent. Appeal to principles. |
| Criticism / "What is wrong with this?" | ref 4 (all) + ref 5 (3) | Nozick. Communitarian. Libertarian. |
| Reflective equilibrium / "How does he argue?" | ref 3 (5) + ref 2 (VII) | Back and forth. Considered judgments. |
Who John Rawls Was: John Rawls (1921–2002) — American philosopher at Harvard University. Served in the infantry in World War II. His 1971 book A Theory of Justice is the most influential work in political philosophy of the 20th century, cited by scholars in philosophy, law, political science, and economics. The book revived social contract theory (Locke, Rousseau, Kant) and made it the dominant framework for thinking about justice.
The Book's Structure: Three parts. Part I (Theory, Chapters 1-4) presents the core ideas: justice as fairness, the original position, the veil of ignorance, the two principles, and the argument for them. Part II (Institutions, Chapters 5-7) applies the theory to constitutional government, economic arrangements, and the distribution of wealth. Part III (Ends, Chapters 8-9) covers the sense of justice, the good of justice, the stability of a just society, and the unity of the self.
Key Concepts:
The Final Statement: The book is highly Kantian in nature. Rawls says: "I must disclaim any originality for the views I put forward. The leading ideas are classical and well known. My intention has been to organize them into a general framework."
Chapter I: Justice as Fairness. Rawls introduces the idea that justice is the first virtue of social institutions. The role of justice is to define the basic structure of society — the way major social institutions distribute fundamental rights and duties and divide the advantages of social cooperation. The primary subject of justice is the "basic structure" of society, not individual transactions.
Chapter III: The Original Position. The most famous chapter. Rawls describes the initial situation in which free and rational persons, concerned to further their own interests, would choose the principles of justice. The veil of ignorance ensures that no one is advantaged or disadvantaged by natural chance or social circumstances. The parties do not know their place in society, their class, their natural assets, their conception of the good, or their psychological propensities.
Chapter V: Distributive Justice. Rawls applies the two principles to economic arrangements. The difference principle requires that social and economic inequalities be arranged so that they are both (a) to the greatest benefit of the least advantaged, and (b) attached to offices and positions open to all under conditions of fair equality of opportunity.
Chapter VI: Duty and Obligation. Rawls discusses the principles of natural duty and the grounds of political obligation. He presents his influential theory of civil disobedience: a public, nonviolent, conscientious act contrary to law, done with the aim of bringing about a change in the law or policies of the government.
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