A Humean Theory of Distributive Justice for a New Century

The Paideia Archive: Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 41:266-272 ()
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Abstract

This paper suggests a strategy for constructing a contemporary Humean theory of distributive justice which would serve to ground what I call an entrepreneurial welfare state. It is argued that blending David Hume's insights about the origins and purposes of justice with Ronald Dworkin's insurance-based reasoning supporting his equality of resources model of distributive justice will yield a state which, as a matter of justice, encourages its members to engage in entrepreneurial activities and which protects them from the worst extremes of market economies.

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Sheldon Wein
Saint Mary's University

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