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Knowing What Justice Means and Being Committed to It: Remarks on Allen Buchanan's Analysis of Conservative Factual Beliefs

In: Journal of Applied Philosophy 38, Nr. 5: 742–746

Authors

Rainer Forst

Abstract

Allen Buchanan argues that a particular set of false factual beliefs, especially when part of a comprehensive ideology, can lead persons to develop ‘morally conservative’ convictions that stand in the way of realising justice even though these persons have a ‘firm grasp of correct principles of justice and a robust commitment to their realisation’. In my remarks, I raise some questions concerning the core argument: How ‘firm’ can a grasp of principles of justice be if a person is blind to the realities of injustice? And how ‘sincerely committed’ to justice can such an injustice-insensitive person be? Alternatively: How firm is that grasp or commitment if one has a radically pessimistic view about human nature so that one does not believe that (egalitarian) justice can or could ever be realised? Secondly, I ask: If such ideologies or false beliefs are in play in reproducing injustice, do they not also ‘mask’ existing injustices?

Sources

Forst, Rainer. 2021. Knowing What Justice Means and Being Committed to It: Remarks on Allen Buchanan’s Analysis of Conservative Factual Beliefs. In: Journal of Applied Philosophy 38, Nr. 5: 742–746. doi: 10.1111/japp.12540.

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