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The Money Question and the Good Life

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Author(s)
Philips, Jos
Keywords
The Money Question
good life
poverty
Bernard Williams and Martha Nussbaum
GE Subjects
Economic ethics
Community ethics
Business ethics
Ethics of economic systems
Labour/professional ethics
Technology ethics
Consumer ethics
Lifestyle ethics
Social ethics
Family ethics
Sexual orientation/gender
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/184561
Abstract
This paper proposes a theory of the good life for use in answering the question how much money the rich should spend on fighting poverty. The paper moves from the abstract to the concrete. To begin with, it investigates various ways to get an answer to the question what is good, and finds itself drawn to objective theories of the good. It then develops, taking Bernard Williams and Martha Nussbaum as its guides, a broad outline of a theory of the good. It holds that something evil happens to people if they do not have a real choice from a reasonable number of projects that realize most of their key capacities to a certain degree, and in connection to this it points to the great importance of money. The paper goes on specifically to consider what criticisms of Nussbaum's version of the capability approach are implied in this outline of a theory of the good. Next, it gets more specific and asks how much money the rich can give -and how they can be restricted in spending their money- without suffering any evil. It does three suggestions: the tithe suggestion, the ecological (or footprint) suggestion, and the fair trade suggestion. To conclude, the paper returns to the question how much money the rich should spend on fighting poverty.
Date
2006
Type
Article
Copyright/License
With permission of the license/copyright holder
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