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Being reasonable in the face of pluralism and other alleged problems for Global Justice

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Brock_EGP_Vol3_No2_2010.pdf
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Author(s)
Brock, Gillian
Keywords
global ethics
pluralism
justice
justice, commutative
GE Subjects
Cultural ethics
Cultural/intercultural ethics

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/174756
Abstract
In his recent review essay, Stan van Hooft raises some interesting potential challenges for cosmopolitan global justice projects, of which my version is one example.1 I am grateful to van Hooft for doing so. I hope by responding to these challenges here, others concerned with developing frameworks for analyzing issues of global justice will also learn something of value. I start by giving a very brief synopsis of key themes of my book, Global Justice,2 so I can address van Hooft’s concerns about the structure of the book. I then outline the normative thought experiment that yields the global justice framework I endorse, in order to address five main concerns van Hooft has with it. These center around problems he foresees about what it would be reasonable to agree to in the face of quite different world views. There are five specific concerns he identifies related to reasonableness and I address these in the third and fourth sections of this paper.
Date
2010
Type
Article
Copyright/License
Creative Commons Copyright (CC 2.5)
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