SUBSCRIBE NOW WELCOME BACK. Do you want to continue reading where you left off? New Republic subscribers can pick up where they left off no matter which device they were previously using. SUBSCRIBE NOW

Go Home The Ideal and the Real

BOOKS AND ARTS DECEMBER 12, 2009

The Ideal and the Real

The Idea of Justice

By Amartya Sen

(Harvard University Press, 467 pp., $29.95)

In his introduction to The Idea of Justice, Amartya Sen asks the reader to imagine a scenario that will figure prominently throughout the book. Three children are arguing among themselves about which one of them should have a flute. The first child, Anne, is a trained musician who can make the best use of the flute. The second child, Bob, is the poorest of the three and owns no other toys or instruments. Clara, the third contender, happens to be the one who, with hard sustained labor, made the flute. Since philosophers try to reason about such distributive problems, each of the children can enlist support from a grand theory of justice that originated in what seems to be an impartial position in moral philosophy.

Utilitarians will opt for giving the flute to Anne, since their criteria for distribution is to give preference to the scheme that will maximize overall utility, thus granting the instrument to the individual who can derive the most pleasure out of it. Bob, the poorest child among the three, will be chosen by egalitarians, since the main concern of their distributive approach is to narrow social and economic gaps as much as possible. And libertarians, who emphasize rights-based ownership entitlements, will claim that Clara deserves the flute as the producer of the object, and that no other distributive concerns--egalitarian or utilitarian--can supersede her entitlement to what she naturally owns.

Since the publication of John Rawls’s monumental book A Theory of Justice in 1971, such grand theories of distributive justice have gained momentum and depth. Rawls himself defended an egalitarian position. He articulated it in his famous difference principle, according to which deviations from strict equality may be allowed only if such deviations will work for the benefit of the worst-off. According to Rawls, perfect equality should have been the rule, but rewarding capable people with differential income will create an incentive for them to raise the production of the sum total of goods, which in a system of fair distribution might end up benefiting the people who are at the bottom of the economic ladder.

The ultimate merit of Rawls’s work did not lie only in his own theory, but in the extraordinarily broad discussion that it generated. Rawls’s work provided a framework for a flurry of counter-theories, such as G.A. Cohen’s in Rescuing Justice and Equality, which challenged Rawls from the left and advocated a stricter egalitarianism; and Robert Nozick’s sophisticated libertarian response in Anarchy, State, and Utopia; and Michael Walzer’s development, in Spheres of Justice, of a communitarian approach to the problem. Now comes Sen’s magnificent book, which is dedicated to Rawls’s memory, but differs dramatically from the Rawlsian and post-Rawlsian conversations.

Sen rejects, as a matter of principle, the nature of Rawls’s project. The reader who seeks in this book yet another exercise in grand theory--another abstract discussion out of which the foundations for the institutions of a just society may be generated--will be disappointed. And the reader who wonders about the connection of all these abstractions about justice to the remedying of actually existing injustices will be glad. Sen questions the plausibility of such edifices of pure reason. His book quite radically attempts to shift the grounds of the conversation altogether. Its seeks to provide a counter-framework rather than a counter-theory. And this is only one of its many admirable ambitions.

 

According to Sen, a sustained and reasoned argument about justice should focus on a result-oriented comparative approach among different conditions, rather than on an attempt to formulate the philosophical conditions of a perfectly just society. We can confidently claim that a society that rejects slavery is more just than a society that endorses slavery. And such a sound comparison can be performed without actually having a clear-cut notion of what a perfectly just society would be like. Injustices are altogether easier to identify than the conditions of perfect justice. And injustices can be identified on the basis of various and competing grand theories, which may overlap in such actual comparative judgments. As Sen observes, we can assess whether a painting by Dalí is better than a painting by Picasso without making the claim that the Mona Lisa is the best or the most ideal painting of all. Constituting a perfect standard is not a necessary condition for the comparative work that has to be done in removing injustices. Nor is it a sufficient condition: we might have a clear conception of the perfectly just society and still find it difficult, or even impossible, to evaluate two options, two courses of action, that present themselves in real life. Each of these options, which will never be fully perfect, might be closer to perfection according to a different variable they each have.

Given the fact that having a perfect conception of the just society is neither necessary nor sufficient for the actual comparative judgments that are needed in real life, Sen concludes that such a project is quite redundant. To the redundancy argument he adds a deeper and philosophically more interesting argument for rejecting the very notion of the theory of justice. He argues that such an attempt is not feasible. Consider again that debate between the three children about the flute. According to Sen, each child makes a persuasive claim, and each of the grand theories that support such claims--utilitarian, egalitarian, libertarian--can withstand impartial scrutiny, and therefore each of them is right. There simply is no way to adjudicate between the rival grand theories that support different distributive schemes.

There is genuine humility in recognizing the intrinsic limits of our reasoning and the essential pluralism of value. Sen’s conceptual sophistication is in the service of a rare intellectual modesty. Still, we must distinguish between two different interpretations of the rejection of the grand theory of justice, only one of which seems to me defensible. Sen, at different moments of his argument, asserts that indeed each of the proposed grand theories is right and has a strong case, and that we should therefore avoid the business of arguing about--and attempting to establish--perfect justice, because perfection can legitimately come in a variety of radically different forms. I think that such a view is implausible. There are some good arguments for rejecting libertarianism, and some of them are made by Sen in his book, and also in his previous works.

Imagine a slight shift in the parable of the three children. Let us assume that what is at stake for distribution is not a flute but a rare medicine that Clara, the brilliant and productive child, somehow managed to invent. She is willing to provide the medicine to Anne, who is very sick, but only for an outrageous compensation. If she does not get her coveted price, then Anne will die; and nobody--this is the libertarian claim--can take the medicine away from her, since she has ownership rights as a producer. In such a story, it seems clear that sticking solely to the libertarian approach to ownership rights, regardless of the outcome, is wrong. Even if we assert that there are such rights, surely they should not be absolute.

A serious argument can be made as well against the other grand theory--utilitarianism, the one that would have awarded the contested flute to the child who would get the most use out of it. In its sole interest in outcomes, utilitarianism tends to erase the individuality of people, as Rawls pointed out. In order to highlight this problematic feature of utilitarianism, let us once again alter the circumstances, and therefore the distributive stakes, of our parable. Let us assume that Clara needs a liver transplant and Anne a heart transplant to survive. From a strict utilitarian perspective, as a matter of principle, there is a justification for removing Bob’s heart and liver. (Assume for the sake of argument that Anne’s heart or Clara’s liver cannot be used for transplants.) But such a violation of Bob’s rights to the integrity of his body seems intuitively wrong. Moreover, the egalitarian approach is also vulnerable to serious criticism. If Clara is the only producer among the children, and everything that she produces is given by the egalitarian to the deprived child Bob, so as to minimize the social gaps, we can expect that Clara will stop producing altogether. And that will end up harming Bob, among others. (Rawls was himself concerned about this consequence.)

So it should be possible to state, and interpret, Sen’s argument in a slightly different and sharper way. The problem with grand theories of justice, we might say, is not that each of them is, in its own way, right, but that by aspiring to grandness and exclusivity they are, all of them, wrong. The very attempt to produce a total and ultimate theory for a perfectly just society will inevitably generate injustice. This is the reason why Sen, after realizing the limitations of each grand theory, wisely resists any temptation to produce one of his own.

 

Following Sen, when we examine different grand theories we realize that each of them has a point, that there is an aspect--but no more than an aspect--of their respective claims that is convincing. Grand theories become perverse when they postulate themselves as exclusive, when they wish to solve all the complex issues with one decisive and final principle. Rights-based libertarians have a point, but their complete disregard of outcomes makes their position flawed. Utilitarians make an important contribution to the conversation, but their exclusive interest in outcomes is wrong. Egalitarians are deeply attractive for the principle that moves them, but their principle cannot withstand critical scrutiny when it is the only principle of justice there is.

The best way of making comparative judgments is by considering multiple points of view as they are refined by different theories, and weighing the diverse claims that they make. By rejecting an ultimate theory of justice, we do not paralyze ourselves, or surrender our intention to improve the world. Quite the contrary. We liberate ourselves for the full complexity of the challenge before us, and equip ourselves with all the elements of comparative reasoning that the evaluation of an injustice requires. Only when philosophy is deployed in this patient and pluralistic way can we apply it usefully to real people and real conditions.

It is important to note also that Sen’s acceptance of the limited and relative force of each grand theory does not deteriorate into any kind of moral relativism. Pluralism is not relativism. Choosing between different approaches and policies is not an expression of taste or prejudice, a purely subjective effusion of passion. Such choice has a more general and objective and rational ground. In Sen’s view, truth may be secured intellectually without our being in control of a single absolute criterion. In this connection, he develops one of the deepest ideas of his book--the notion that he calls positional objectivity.

Objectivity, Sen insists, is not omniscience, or a God’s-eye view of things, or a view from nowhere. After all, we are always somewhere, in a specific position, with particular constrictions of perception and understanding. Yet we still can mentally correct for the limitations of our cognitive situation and make a rational judgment in choosing a policy and opting between alternatives. We do this--we arrive at objectivity--by means of a thorough examination of diverse points of view. This is also the procedure of democracy, which Sen likes to call government by discussion. In a true democracy, we are open to ideas and methods that originate outside our own cultural and political traditions. It is through such an examination of the relative weight of different arguments that we can approach a consensus about the truth of a matter, without claiming to possess any perfect or ideal or absolute standard.

Sen makes a powerful argument for adopting a particular standard in ranking and comparing the various approaches to proposed policies or states of affairs. In making such assessments, he says, we should consider the standard of capabilities, and their distribution across a society. By capabilities, he means the actual effective power that people have to develop their human potential and to act in the world. Such a scale measures relative conditions such as health, literacy, and freedom, which all combine together to measure the relative condition of people for the fulfillment of themselves and their community. In measuring capabilities, we must understand that sometimes the broadening of agency and effectiveness may bring about a decline in happiness. Deprived people with no choice might be happy about their condition, since happiness is often a function of limited expectations; and with rising expectations comes the revolution that bears their name, and also the possibility of disappointment and defeat. And yet, Sen insists, we should opt for agency and freedom rather than for sheer happiness.

In his emphasis on capabilities, Sen rejects two other measures of the condition of individual agency: income and well-being. Income is too narrow a criterion, since the capacity to convert income into actual freedoms and possibilities differs between people of similar means. If someone is limited by an illness or a handicap, his capacity to make use of a certain income will be very different from that of a healthier person. According to Sen, we should also avoid using well-being--which is very commonly supported among economists who deal with social choice--as a criterion for our approach to justice. The adoption of welfare, well-being, or happiness as the standard is based on an assumption that people are self-interested creatures who seek the fulfillment of their desires, and that the rational approach to assessing a social situation is measuring to what degree it offers maximization of self-interest. Well-being, in other words, is just a softer name for self-interest and egotistical harshness.

The repudiation of the economicist account of life is one of this book’s most valuable achievements. People seek not only their own well-being but also the well-being of others, and often they are willing to make sacrifices so that others will benefit. In measuring their situation, therefore, we should consider also the degree to which they have the capability to contribute to others. Theorists who support the self-interest picture of “economic man” claim that this kind of altruism is actually reducible to egoism. In this economic view, people seek the good of others because it will make them happy. There is no essential difference between an altruist and an egotist--they both wish the fulfillment of their desires, but the altruist happens to have a desire that benefits others.

Such an argument is a reversal of the actual causal order. People do not seek the good of others because it will first make them happy. They are happy as a result of the help, the happiness, that they give to others: they wish to help for its own sake. The gratification that they receive from helping is hardly the primary reason for their help. Even more, Sen argues, the very capability and power to affect the lives of others for the better is the source of our moral obligation.

The spectacle of an economist rejecting a purely economic understanding of the individual is delightful to behold. And this wise and deep position--focusing on a comparative, results-oriented approach, which is measured by the actual capabilities that it offers human beings--is not based on Sen’s arguments alone, important and penetrating as they are. His position expresses also a larger sensibility that is anchored in his exceptional range of thought and his lifelong commitments. Besides what he describes as his love affair with philosophy, he is a world-renowned economist and one of the greatest public intellectuals of India, who has been a leading voice for social and economic reforms, breaking new ground in the analysis of gender inequality, famine, and illiteracy.

Sen’s range is amazing. His intimacy with the Hindu, Buddhist, and Muslim cultures of India, which is beautifully woven into the book, gives him access to a far greater range of argumentation and reasoning than is common among philosophers who were educated exclusively in the Western analytical tradition. His knowledge of this vast cultural history, and his profound respect for it, is an important source of Sen’s humility in recognizing the essential plurality of legitimate claims--in rejecting any sort of monism in the life of the mind.

This larger scope, I should add, enables Sen to teach--by example: he is not a preacher of any kind--a more nuanced sense of the complexity and the richness of Eastern and Islamic cultures. Though Sen is steeped in other traditions (some of which are, of course, his own traditions), his syncretism carries no threat of a clash of civilizations. Nor does it propound any kind of superficial harmony. Instead his work--in its simultaneous affirmation of the universal and the particular--serves as an eloquent and humane testimony to the power of reason, which respects (when it is honest and attends to the integrity of its arguments) the multiplicity of voices and traditions. Reason seeks truth wherever it may be found, and so, like the author of this genuinely important book, it travels widely, and may find support near and far.

Moshe Halbertal is a professor of philosophy at the Hebrew University and the Gruss Professor at New York University School of Law.

For more TNR, become a fan on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

Show all 5 comments

You must be a subscriber to post comments. Subscribe today.

5 comments

The trouble with a multi-factored approach to ethics is that in the absence of a decision procedure, we are left with arguing parties, each convinced of the rightness of their own claim, and the "winner," if there is one, is the one who is most eloquent. Sen's approach is not unlike that of the common law -- look at all the factors, such as precedent, public policy, equity, etc., and let the law sort them out. But the common law has a decider, known as a judge. Ethics has nothing comparable. Sen's approach comes close to saying that the way to determine the most ethical outcome is to adopt the best argument. And that, in turn, comes close to reducing ethics to rhetoric.

- JohnEMack

December 12, 2009 at 1:32pm

You must be a subscriber to post comments. Subscribe today.

JohnEMack I admittedly have some concerns with this essay that I’m still working out in my own mind. It seems finally to me not to say very much although it is wonderfully written, a model of clear accessible thinking and argument, which was a pleasure to read and consider from end to end. But I want to quarrel with your brief take on it. I am speaking of Halbertal not Sem. Simply put, I see no warrant for you saying as against Halbertal that ultimately eloquence wins. Where is the textual evidence for this assertion by you, as to either his conclusion or as to the unstated consequence of his argument? I also am unclear as to the analogy to the common law. Your description of the workings of the common law strikes me as circular. When you speak of the conventional legal materials judges process in their adjudication—which by the way are heavy on precedent and slight on public policy save where case law sanctions the resort to public policy and for which you are conflating two meanings of equity: equity as fairness and equity as a body of discrete legal doctrine—the point you want to make, I think, is that in hard cases judges bring to their decisions personal preferences, biases, outlooks, values, political perspectives, ideology, views of the world and so on which in strict sense are extra legal. It is these latter extra legal qualities which in hard cases are dispositive. Easy cases—those readily decidable on conventional legal criteria—don’t raise theoretical problems. So in the hard cases, contrary to what you say, “the law” is not sorting them out. Something else is and that’s your circularity. But, regardless, on Halbertal’s analysis—dealing with injustice in the real world and disavowing standards of perfection as embodied in grand theories— we have deciders too, policy makers, and, ultimately, on a grander scale, people voting. Halbertal, and I presume Sen, is surely saying, as you beign to suggest, adopt the best policy on the basis of the best argument as measured by the notion of “capabilities”: ...Sen makes a powerful argument for adopting a particular standard in ranking and comparing the various approaches to proposed policies or states of affairs. In making such assessments, he says, we should consider the standard of capabilities, and their distribution across a society. By capabilities, he means the actual effective power that people have to develop their human potential and to act in the world. Such a scale measures relative conditions such as health, literacy, and freedom, which all combine together to measure the relative condition of people for the fulfillment of themselves and their community... However, while there may be, as I am inclined to think, problems with this notion of “capabilities” at least as briefly argued for here, for whatever any of those problems may be, I see nothing that points to needing to conclude that, in the end, choice comes down to eloquence or rhetoric. That conclusion seems to me quite inapposite, as I say, to Halbertal’s argument.

- basman

December 12, 2009 at 4:57pm

You must be a subscriber to post comments. Subscribe today.

Since I haven't read Sen's book, I can only comment on Halbertal's description of it. However, if Halbertal's description is accurate, then it would seem that Sen has "smuggled in," to use a favorite Marxist criticism, his own universal theory under cover of the claim that we cannot have one and should not strive for one. His desire to rank outcomes based on the distribution (I assume egalitarian distribution) of capabilities seems no different in principle from either the utilitarian theory or the egalitarian theory. It is just that he is distributing something other than utility or income -- "capability." The one thing his is not is the libertarian theory which, based on what I know of him, Sen abhors. I think the much more pragmatic and important problem is, who gets to decide what in the face of the many arguments that can be mustered for various policy propositions? The question of who gets to decide is virtually the entire subject of the US Constitution. The Constitution makes very defensible, indeed wise and durable, choices about whether some matter is to be decided by individuals, by regional government, by the national government, or by a particular branch of the national government. And who gets to decide is the most important practical question. Unfortunately, particularly in the years since the end of the Second World War, the constitutional formalism has been overcome by a combination of centralization of capital and media control together with the corrupt synthesis of our campaign finance system, computer-perfected gerrymandering, and lobbying (particularly the migration of people from government into lobbying where they can realize the rewards of their corruption). The democratic-republic envisioned in the Constitution now exists in name only. It has been captured by wealth down to its capillary roots. Hence, we can now see that in virtually all matters not reserved for individual choice (and those too when it matters to wealth), the money decides. Without any practicable power of democratic government to balance the interests of wealth and the wealthy, we are in deep trouble in every sphere of our national existence. If we had a functioning democracy, I don't think arguments such as Sen's would be very interesting, except perhaps to philosophers. We are not lacking in the practical ability to evaluate policy alternatives and Sen (per Halbertal) sheds no light on these. We are lacking a functional distribution of power. I for one don't care about the rest, the over-arching theories, including Sen's non-theory.

- roidubouloi

December 13, 2009 at 10:21pm

You must be a subscriber to post comments. Subscribe today.

The following arises from an argument I ma hving with a firend of mine. His view is implicit in the below quoted response to him. __________________________________________- "..In answer to your most thoughtful email, and before we go down a long road, consider whether we really need to take that trip, whether it’s really necessary to go behind Halbertal's presupposition. I am not about to, nor could I, define justice in any way that that even pretended to be close to dispositive. (And being the subtextual detective I am, I think you want to get to a conception of rights and justice that doesn’t allow for authority to take away the maker's flute. If that's right, then that seems inconceivable. But I digress.) My argument for immediate purposes is that we don't need to go down a long road, that we can stay right here at home, as Halbertal does, presupposing, as we agree that he has, "The ability, and right, of the governing with the consent of the governed to make policy choices grounded in competing notions of justice…” Justice involves necessarily people—it could be just two—in social arrangements. It necessarily involves judgments about their acts and omissions concerning others and the group they live within; and it necessarily involves the acts and omissions of the group as reflected in the regime. Its judgments necessarily go to the boundaries for individuals’, groups’ and the regime’s actions and omissions towards each other. Justice’s standpoints necessarily include what is best for individuals, what is best for their groups, and what is best for the regime in promoting overall betterment. It necessarily involves the allocation and distribution of resources. It necessarily involves proportionality in the balancing of conflicting claims. And not necessarily, but as Sen, Halbertal and I (only modestly) argue, there is no overriding criterion that can answer absolutely and certainly all these competing claims. This brief excursion through triteness is encapsulated by the triad of theories Halbertal via Sen sketches. They are not exclusive by any means; nor are they meant to be. The invitation is open to other theories. But Halbertal’s three are to hand. They generate in their diverse emphases an analytical distillation of the claims to justice. And they represent a pragmatic assessment that liberal democracy founded on the values and principles enshrined and reasonably operational in, for example, North American Constitutions constitute the best social arrangements for justice fulfilling itself in people’s lives. So I don't argue for a theory of justice (or the state) justified by “process” such as the tripartite division amongst the executive, the legislature and the judiciary or elections. I suggest that the fundamentals of North American democracies, and of other operational democracies, manifest justice when, generally, conduct approximates ideals. So I quarrel with you about the sturdiness of Halbertal’s question (though I readily admit that I failed to get the point of your question about it and may still do). My quarrel is, consistent with not needing to go behind his presupposition, that we needn't go behind his question in the way I read you to do: “..Asking that question before asking the question of who has the right to dispose of the flute in the first place is to presuppose that someone or some group has the (philosophical) right to take the flute out of the hands of its maker. If I question that presupposition -- and I do -- then merely invoking the sorts of processes described above isn't going to provide an answer, since the question concerns the more fundamental one of the philosophical legitimacy or justice of the right…” For, insofar as Halbertal recognizes the legitimacy of the libertarian theory of individual rights and freedom from the regime, he is giving voice and pride of place to that theory. I cannot imagine a notion of justice that does not, of necessity, allow for taking the maker’s flute in certain situations, that taking properly understood as the strength then and there of either—given Halbertal’s typology— egalitarian claims or utilitarian ones. I think your real argument is not to go back to philosophical first principles properly to conceive a theory of justice. I think it’s really concerned with the “philosophical legitimacy” of a greater emphasis on the libertarian claim. My argument is that justice will never resolve itself in the sheer primacy of one of these theories. They will endlessly compete with each other, endlessly argue with each other, in the fray of liberal democratic politics and be pragmatically adjusted by policy makers and the electorate by their lights, principles and practical concerns as conditions and circumstances change..."

- basman

December 21, 2009 at 12:59am

You must be a subscriber to post comments. Subscribe today.

testing: http://basmanroselaw.blogspot.com/

- basman

December 27, 2009 at 6:26pm

You must be a subscriber to post comments. Subscribe today.

SHARE HIGHLIGHT

0 CHARACTERS SELECTED

TWEET THIS

POST TO TUMBLR

SHARE ON FACEBOOK

Close