Social Philosophy

The principle question for social philosophy is:

Who gets what?

This matter is known as DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE. Just how are the goods and services within any society to be distributed? In any society no matter how small (an island society) or how large (the People’s Republic of China) there will arise the question of how goods and services are to be distributed. Whether people will be free to work and keep what they earn or whether all must contribute in some way to the welfare of others, particularly those not capable of working and caring for themselves. Below there are a number of principles which have been developed in response to this problem of deciding how social life is to be regulated and people are to be cared for. Read these and note the differences.

On Distributive Justice:

READ: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/justice-distributive/  

There are different theories of how to make the basic distribution.  Among them are:

Strict Egalitarianism

The Difference Principle

Resource-Based Principles

Welfare-Based Principles

Desert-Based Principles

Libertarian Principles

Consider some matter of importance to us today that relates to the question of the distribution of goods and services. Apply any of the social theories you have read about and take a position on it. For example,

The distribution of the funds of the charities to the victims of the 9-11 Disaster, how should the federal money be distributed? What principle of distributive justice do you favor using.

Read how the money was distributed.  $7 Billion for the Grief of Sept. 11
 

There are a variety of social situations that result from the application of these principles or from a combination of the principles.  The range of variations is quite broad and includes communist states and democratic states.  It includes societies that have great concern for individual welfare and those that have great concern for the common welfare.  It includes those that have liberal as well as conservative orientations.  What does this mean? 

We shall contrast two rather different approaches to the matter of distribution in the next section:  Liberalism and Conservatism


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