An innovative argument that vindicates our normative commitment to
basic equality, synthesising philosophy, history, and psychology What
makes human beings one another’s equals? That we are "basic equals"
has become a bedrock assumption in Western moral and political
philosophy. And yet establishing why we ought to believe this claim
has proved fiendishly difficult, floundering in the face of the many
inequalities that characterise the human condition. In this
provocative work, Paul Sagar offers a novel approach to explaining and
justifying basic equality. Rather than attempting to find an
independent foundation for basic equality, he argues, we should
instead come to see our commitment to this idea as the result of the
practice of treating others as equals. Moreover, he continues, it is
not enough to grapple with the problem through philosophy alone—by
just thinking very hard, in our armchairs; we must draw insights from
history and psychology as well. Sagar writes that, as things stand,
there appear to be no good arguments for believing in the truth of
basic equality. Indeed, for much of Western intellectual history and
social practice, basic inequality has been the default position. How
is it then, Sagar asks, that in Western societies, in a period of less
than a century, basic equality emerged as the dominant view? Sagar
approaches this not as a mere philosophical puzzle, but as a dramatic
historical development. In so doing, he shows us what is at stake when
human beings treat one another as equals just because they are human
beings.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780691257792
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter