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UID:155@harvard-yenching.org
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20161005T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20161005T133000
DTSTAMP:20201027T004206Z
URL:https://www.harvard-yenching.org/events/first-principle-justice-and-pr
 operty-owning-democracy/
SUMMARY:The First Principle of Justice and Property-owning Democracy
DESCRIPTION:\n	Zhou Lian (Associate Professor\, School of Philosophy\, Renm
 in University\, China\; HYI Visiting Scholar)\n	Chair/discussant: Eric Bee
 rbohm (Professor of Government\, Harvard University)\n\n\n	John Rawls dist
 inguishes five kinds of regimes viewed as social systems\, complete with t
 heir political\, economic\, and social institutions: (a) laissez-faire cap
 italism\; (b) welfare-state capitalism\; (c) state socialism with a comman
 d economy\; (d) property-owning democracy\; and finally\, (e) liberal (dem
 ocratic) socialism. He claims that the former three systems violate the tw
 o principles of justice in at least one way\, and that only property-ownin
 g democracy and liberal (democratic) socialism satisfy the two principles 
 of justice. The justification of the thin conception of economic liberties
  in the first principle of justice is the key to understanding Rawls’s c
 laim. As James Nickel and Benjamin Barros suggest\, Rawls’s justificatio
 n is not convincing in some aspects\, hence\, which social systems satisfy
  the two principles of justice remains an open question.
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